Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

Contributions of processed foods to dietary intake in the US from 20032008: a report of the food and nutrition science solutions joint task force of the academy of nutrition and dietetics, American society for nutrition, institute of food technologists, and international food information council4

Eicher-Miller HA, Fulgoni VL, Keast DR

J Nutr. 2012;142:2065S-2072S · 2012

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Summary

Processed foods are an integral part of American diets, but a comparison of the nutrient contribution of foods by level of processing with the recommendations of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans regarding nutrients to encourage or to reduce has not been documented. The mean reported daily dietary intakes of these nutrients and other components were examined among 25,351 participants ≥2 y of age in the 2003-2008 NHANES to determine the contribution of processed food to total intakes. Also examined was the percent contribution of each nutrient to the total reported daily nutrient intake for each of the 5 categories of food that were defined by the level of processing. All processing levels contributed to nutrient intakes, and none of the levels contributed solely to nutrients to be encouraged or solely to food components to be reduced. The processing level was a minor determinant of individual foods' nutrient contribution to the diet and, therefore, should not be a primary factor when selecting a balanced diet.

Outcomes reported

Referenced by Cambridge UPF young adults as citation 3; likely supports topic area: ultra-processed foods / UPF; diet quality / nutrition / dietary guidelines. Topics: diet quality / nutrition / dietary guidelines; ultra-processed foods / UPF Evidence type: Report Source report: Cambridge UPF young adults Ref#: Cambridge UPF young adults #3 Original: Eicher-Miller HA, Fulgoni VL, Keast DR. Contributions of processed foods to dietary intake in the US from 20032008: a report of the food and nutrition science solutions joint task force of the academy of nutrition and dietetics, American society for nutrition, institute of food technologists, and international food information council4. J Nutr. 2012;142:2065S-2072S.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Food & agricultural policy
Study type
Research
Source type
Peer-reviewed research
Status
Published
Geography
United Kingdom
System type
Other
DOI
10.3945/jn.112.164442
Catalogue ID
IRmoq83umn-a2c017
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