How processed food impacts your health
Siddhi Jain
Soft drinks, ketchup, jams, tinned fruits,
and potato chips—all these taste delicious and are convenient, but it is
important to note that they are examples of processed foods and large
quantities may be harmful to your health.
According to the UK’s NHS, processed food
is any food that has been altered in some way during preparation. Food
processing can be as basic as freezing, canning, baking, and drying.
“Processed food is not ‘real food’; it is
food that has been modified by chemical processes and contains
additives, flavorings, emulsifiers, and stabilizers. The food is then
assembled into ready-to-eat hyper-palatable food called ‘Cosmetic food’.
The easiest way to judge how processed the food is to look at the
length of the food label at the back of the packet. The longer the list,
the more processed is the food in it,” Dr. Tejal Lathia, consultant
endocrinologist, Hiranandani Hospital, Vashi, A Fortis Network Hospital,
told IANS.
Natural sugars are found in fruit, cereals
and vegetables along with fiber, vitamins, minerals and antioxidants and
thus, they are healthy. Refined or processed sugar, however, lacks
these accompanying vital nutrients and is found in most processed foods,
even those that are not considered sweet like ready-to-eat soups and
ketchup.
Notably, processed food includes packaged
breads, breakfast cereals, confectionery (sweets), biscuits, pastries,
buns, cakes, industrial chips and french fries, soft and fruit drinks or
packed juices, packaged pre-prepared meals (frozen meals) and
reconstituted meat products.
As per the doctor, processed foods are harmful because they contain higher amounts of unhealthy fat, sugar and salt.
The extra calories—termed ’empty’ calories
because they lack nutritional value—consumed in the form of fat and
sugar, from processed food, leads to weight gain and high blood sugar.
Excess sodium, that comes from salt, in this type of food raises blood
pressure and causes water retention. The combination of high blood sugar
and blood pressure with obesity increases the risk of heart diseases
and cancer.
Furthermore, most processed foods also lack
fiber and protein, which are necessary for satiety or the feeling of
being full after a meal. Failure to feel full results in consumption of
large quantities of the processed food at one time. Lastly, these
processed foods contain little to no vitamins and minerals. If a large
part of a person’s diet consists of processed foods, they can suffer
from lack of important vitamins and minerals.
“A study from Brazil showed that preschool
children who consumed excess ultra-processed food (40 per cent of their
daily calorie intake) had increased waist circumference by the time they
entered primary school. Two large European studies have studied the
link between consumption of processed foods and health. One study found
that people who consumed even 10 per cent more processed food, had
increased risk of heart attacks and strokes.
“The second study showed that those who
consumed 4 or more servings of processed food a day had a 60 percent
increased chance of dying, when compared with those who consumed less
than 2 servings of processed food per day,” Tejal said.
In addition to the poor nutritional quality
of the food, substances formed from additives during the production,
processing and storage as well as contact of food with the packaging
have unknown effects. The NutriNet-Sante study from France found an
increase in overall cancer risk, as well as breast cancer risk by 10 per
cent for each 10 per cent increase in consumption of processed food.
In India, consumption of packaged food is
on the rise paralleling an increase in overweight and obese children and
adults. Strict policies need to be in place for food labeling, tackling
the availability of packaged foods near schools and colleges as well as
increase in taxation for companies manufacturing processed foods. Only
then can we stem the tide of increasing obesity, heart disease,
diabetes, cancer and death.

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