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Ultra-Processed Foods Linked to Shorter Life Even When Nutrients Are MatchedNutrition & Diet

Ultra-Processed Foods Linked to Shorter Life Even When Nutrients Are Matched

Ultra-processed foods dominate the modern diet, making up over 50% of calories in high-income countries including 56–70% of what American children eat. A landmark randomized controlled trial tested whether matching ultra-processed foods to whole foods on calories, sugar, fat, and fiber would eliminate health differences. The answer: no. The processing itself causes harm beyond its nutrient profile. Across nearly 90% of studies, ultra-processed food consumption links to obesity, cancer, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, depression, frailty, and all-cause mortality. Not a single study found a beneficial health outcome tied to ultra-processed food intake. The article argues that industrial additives, emulsifiers, flavors, and other non-cookbook ingredients are biologically harmful independent of macronutrients.

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