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Home / Health / UPFs: The New Cigarettes?

UPFs: The New Cigarettes?

3 Feb

•

Summary

  • Ultra-processed foods engineered like cigarettes encourage addiction.
  • High UPF intake linked to obesity, Parkinson's, and metabolic issues.
  • Regulation strategies from tobacco control can curb UPF harm.
UPFs: The New Cigarettes?

A significant study published in The Milbank Quarterly draws a stark parallel between ultra-processed foods (UPFs) and cigarettes, advocating for stricter regulatory measures. Research indicates that both industries employ similar strategies to enhance product appeal and encourage consumption, effectively hijacking human biology. Evidence from 50 countries links high UPF intake to increased rates of obesity, neurological changes, and metabolic issues like Parkinson's disease.

Scientists from prominent US universities highlight that UPFs, which encompass items from chips and candy to seemingly healthy granola bars, are engineered to deliver reinforcing substances, similar to nicotine in cigarettes. The study calls for public health efforts to shift focus from individual responsibility to industry accountability, advocating for policy tools such as restrictions on child-targeted marketing and reduced availability in schools.

Drawing parallels with successful 20th-century tobacco control, the research proposes that lessons from litigation, marketing bans, and structural interventions can serve as a roadmap for mitigating UPF-related harm. Experts emphasize that UPFs should be viewed not just nutritionally, but as addictive, industrially engineered substances driving preventable diseases worldwide.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Both ultra-processed foods and cigarettes are engineered to encourage consumption and addiction by delivering specific reinforcing substances, with UPFs using refined carbohydrates and fats.
High consumption of ultra-processed foods has been linked to rising rates of obesity, neurological changes, and metabolic dysfunction, such as Parkinson's disease.
Lessons from tobacco regulation, including litigation, marketing restrictions, and structural interventions, offer a roadmap for reducing harm caused by ultra-processed foods.

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