"Animal Protein is Always Associated with Higher Mortality" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhsCqT1iYpM

The #NOVA definition system proponents don't mind the subjectivity of their system. It's a popular system for defining "processed food".

Well, this kind of subjectivity has a downside. Here, Dr. Barnard makes the case that common animal based products are actually very, very, very processed.

That's how subjectivity works, Barnard is making a valid argument. Go vegan, stop eating ultraprocessed food.

#upf #ultraProcessedProducts #processedFood #goVegan #plantBased #animalBased #ultraProcessedFood #ultraProcessedPeople #foodProcessing #foodChemicals #nutrition #processedMeat

Animal Protein is Always Associated with Higher Mortality: Dr Barnard

YouTube

(intense quotes)

"Uh-oh! Vegan alternatives are bad for you, surprise, surprise."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkQCTw6S3qM

This one is more local to Earthling Ed (UK).

Ed shows how the UPF story is being weaponized, via disinformation, against vegans and for the meat industry.

Anyone who's been vegan for a long time is probably already aware of the Whole Foods Plant Based diet (WFPB). We've been pointing out the problem with processed foods for a long time, long before "UPF" and "NOVA".

#UPF #plantBased #animalBased #diet #health #ultraProcessedFood #ultraProcessedProducts #ultraProcessedPeople

Uh-oh! Vegan alternatives are bad for you, surprise, surprise.

YouTube
Academic and doctor Chris van Tulleken: ‘Ultra-processed products are food that lies to us’

The author on how his mission to improve our national diet began – and where it needs to go

The Guardian

@Dragofix

Ultra-processed foods: how functional is the NOVA system? https://www.nature.com/articles/s41430-022-01099-1

Ultra-Processed Foods: Definitions and Policy Issues https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2475299122129872

and easier read:
Responses to study on ultra-processed foods and weight gain
https://tabledebates.org/research-library/responses-study-ultra-processed-foods-and-weight-gain

Tangential: https://www.redpenreviews.org/reviews/metabolical/

I think that there's value in understanding the problems of these very processed foods, and we have the whole WFPB diet thing already, but I'm also concerned about food security.

But I also see as a backdoor to meat industry pseudoscience (despite the fact that they also use processing).

I prefer the focus on addictive food since that's what "Big Food" has been going after for a long time, which includes products with animal parts and secretions.

A nice intro to hyperpalatable foods: https://theproof.com/are-you-seduced-by-foods-tera-fazzino-phd/

#UPF #food #ultraProcessedFood #ultraProcessedProducts

Ultra-processed foods: how functional is the NOVA system? - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition

In the NOVA classification system, descriptive criteria are used to assign foods to one of four groups based on processing-related criteria. Although NOVA is widely used, its robustness and functionality remain largely unexplored. We determined whether this system leads to consistent food assignments by users. French food and nutrition specialists completed an online survey in which they assigned foods to NOVA groups. The survey comprised two lists: one with 120 marketed food products with ingredient information and one with 111 generic food items without ingredient information. We quantified assignment consistency among evaluators using Fleiss’ κ (range: 0–1, where 1 = 100% agreement). Hierarchical clustering on principal components identified clusters of foods with similar distributions of NOVA assignments. Fleiss’ κ was 0.32 and 0.34 for the marketed foods (n = 159 evaluators) and generic foods (n = 177 evaluators), respectively. There were three clusters within the marketed foods: one contained 90 foods largely assigned to NOVA4 (91% of assignments), while the two others displayed greater assignment heterogeneity. There were four clusters within the generic foods: three clusters contained foods mostly assigned to a single NOVA group (69–79% of assignments), and the fourth cluster comprised 28 foods whose assignments were more evenly distributed across the four NOVA groups. Although assignments were more consistent for some foods than others, overall consistency among evaluators was low, even when ingredient information was available. These results suggest current NOVA criteria do not allow for robust and functional food assignments.

Nature