Hall Kevin D
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2018 Jan;26(1):11-13. doi: 10.1002/oby.22073.
Several putative explanations of the obesity epidemic relate to the changing food environment. Individual dietary macronutrients have each been theorized to be the prime culprit for population obesity, but these explanations are unlikely. Rather, obesity probably resulted from changes in the caloric quantity and quality of the food supply in concert with an industrialized food system that produced and marketed convenient, highly processed foods from cheap agricultural inputs. Such foods often contain high amounts of salt, sugar, fat, and flavor additives and are engineered to have supernormal appetitive properties driving increased consumption. Ubiquitous access to convenient and inexpensive food also changed normative eating behavior, with more people snacking, eating in restaurants, and spending less time preparing meals at home. While such changes in the food environment provide a likely explanation of the obesity epidemic, definitive scientific demonstration is hindered by the difficulty in experimentally isolating and manipulating important variables at the population level.
肥胖症流行的几种可能解释与不断变化的食物环境有关。对于个体膳食中的常量营养素,都有理论认为它们是人群肥胖的主要元凶,但这些解释不太可能成立。相反,肥胖可能是由于食物供应的热量数量和质量发生变化,再加上工业化食品系统的影响,该系统利用廉价的农业投入生产并销售方便的高度加工食品。这类食品通常含有大量的盐、糖、脂肪和调味添加剂,并且被设计成具有超常的开胃特性,从而促使人们增加消费。随时随地都能获取方便且廉价的食物也改变了正常的饮食行为,越来越多的人吃零食、在餐馆就餐,并且在家做饭的时间减少。虽然食物环境的这种变化为肥胖症流行提供了一种可能的解释,但在人群层面上难以通过实验分离和操纵重要变量,这阻碍了确凿的科学论证。