Poti Jennifer M, Mendez Michelle A, Ng Shu Wen, Popkin Barry M
From the Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2015 Jun;101(6):1251-62. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.114.100925. Epub 2015 May 6.
"Processed foods" are defined as any foods other than raw agricultural commodities and can be categorized by the extent of changes occurring in foods as a result of processing. Conclusions about the association between the degree of food processing and nutritional quality are discrepant.
We aimed to determine 2000-2012 trends in the contribution of processed and convenience food categories to purchases by US households and to compare saturated fat, sugar, and sodium content of purchases across levels of processing and convenience.
We analyzed purchases of consumer packaged goods for 157,142 households from the 2000-2012 Homescan Panel. We explicitly defined categories for classifying products by degree of industrial processing and separately by convenience of preparation. We classified >1.2 million products through use of barcode-specific descriptions and ingredient lists. Median saturated fat, sugar, and sodium content and the likelihood that purchases exceeded maximum daily intake recommendations for these components were compared across levels of processing or convenience by using quantile and logistic regression.
More than three-fourths of energy in purchases by US households came from moderately (15.9%) and highly processed (61.0%) foods and beverages in 2012 (939 kcal/d per capita). Trends between 2000 and 2012 were stable. When classifying foods by convenience, ready-to-eat (68.1%) and ready-to-heat (15.2%) products supplied the majority of energy in purchases. The adjusted proportion of household-level food purchases exceeding 10% kcal from saturated fat, 15% kcal from sugar, and 2400 mg sodium/2000 kcal simultaneously was significantly higher for highly processed (60.4%) and ready-to-eat (27.1%) food purchases than for purchases of less-processed foods (5.6%) or foods requiring cooking/preparation (4.9%).
Highly processed food purchases are a dominant, unshifting part of US purchasing patterns, but highly processed foods may have higher saturated fat, sugar, and sodium content than less-processed foods. Wide variation in nutrient content suggests food choices within categories may be important.
“加工食品”被定义为除未加工的农产品之外的任何食品,并且可根据食品因加工而发生的变化程度进行分类。关于食品加工程度与营养质量之间关联的结论并不一致。
我们旨在确定2000年至2012年期间加工食品类别和方便食品类别在美国家庭购买量中所占比例的趋势,并比较不同加工水平和方便程度的购买食品中的饱和脂肪、糖和钠含量。
我们分析了2000年至2012年家庭扫描面板中157,142个家庭购买的消费包装食品。我们明确界定了按工业加工程度和分别按制备方便程度对产品进行分类的类别。我们通过使用特定条形码描述和成分列表对超过120万种产品进行了分类。通过分位数和逻辑回归比较了不同加工水平或方便程度下购买食品的饱和脂肪、糖和钠含量中位数以及购买量超过这些成分每日最大摄入量建议的可能性。
2012年美国家庭购买食品中超过四分之三的能量来自适度加工(15.9%)和高度加工(61.0%)的食品及饮料(人均每天939千卡)。2000年至2012年期间的趋势保持稳定。按方便程度对食品进行分类时,即食食品(68.1%)和即热食品(15.2%)在购买食品中提供了大部分能量。高度加工食品(60.4%)和即食食品(27.1%)的家庭层面食品购买量中,同时超过来自饱和脂肪的10%千卡、来自糖的15%千卡和2400毫克钠/2000千卡的调整后比例,显著高于加工较少的食品(5.6%)或需要烹饪/制备的食品(4.9%)。
购买高度加工食品是美国购买模式中占主导且不变的一部分,但高度加工食品的饱和脂肪、糖和钠含量可能高于加工较少的食品。营养成分的广泛差异表明在各类别中进行食品选择可能很重要。