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Data

Year of publication

2020

Type

Quantitative

Design

Cross-sectional

Classification

NOVA

Country studied

Canada

Data

Secondary

Data Collected

One or two 24 hours recalls

Study setting

Household

Age group of participant

All ages/2+

Participant sex

Mixed

Target population

General

Sample size

n=4920 (participants)

Ultra-processed foods drive to unhealthy diets: Evidence from Chile

Goal

Assess the consumption of ultra-processed foods and its association with the overall dietary content of nutrients related to non-communicable diseases (NCD) in the Chilean diet and to estimate the population attributable fraction of ultra-processed food consumption on the unhealthy nutrient content.

Results

In Chile, ultra-processed foods represented 28·6 % of the total energy intake. A significant positive association was found between the dietary share of ultra-processed foods and NCD-promoting nutrients such as dietary energy density (standardised regression coefficient (_) = 0·22), content of free sugars (_ = 0·45), total fats (_ = 0·26), saturated fats (_ = 0·19), trans fats (_ = 0·09) and Na:K ratio (_ = 0·04), while a significant negative association was found with the content of NCD-protective nutrients such as K (_ = –0·19) and fibre (_ = –0·31). The content of Na (_ = 0·02) presented no significant association. Except for Na, the prevalence of inadequate intake of all nutrients (WHO recommendations) increased across quintiles of the dietary share of ultra-processed foods. With the reduction of ultra-processed foods consumption to the level seen among the 20 % lowest consumers (3·8 % (0–9·3 %) of the total energy from ultra-processed foods), the prevalence of nutrient inadequacy would be reduced in almost three-fourths for trans fats; in half for energy density (foods); in around one-third for saturated fats, energy density (beverages), free sugars and total fats; in near 20 % for fibre and Na:K ratio and in 13 % for K.

Authors

Cediel G, Reye M, Corvalán C, Levy RB, Uauy R, et. al.

Journal

Public Health Nutrition

DOI

Département de Nutrition, Faculté de Médecine, Université de Montréal

2405 Chem. de la Côte-Sainte-Catherine, Montréal, QC H3T 1A8
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