Nguyen Hillary, Jones Alexandra, Barrett Eden M, Shahid Maria, Gaines Allison, Hu Monica, Pettigrew Simone, Wu Jason H Y, Coyle Daisy H
The George Institute for Global Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Nutr Diet. 2025 Feb;82(1):42-52. doi: 10.1111/1747-0080.12880. Epub 2024 May 13.
The Australian Dietary Guidelines are currently being revised and ultra-processed foods have been identified as a high priority action area. To better understand how well the current Dietary Guidelines align with level of processing classifications, the aim of this study was to assess the alignment between the Australian Dietary Guidelines and the NOVA classification system for classifying the healthiness of packaged foods.
Data were sourced from the Australian FoodSwitch dataset, which included 28 071 packaged food and beverage products available in major Australian supermarkets in 2022. Products were classified as (i) core or discretionary (Australian Dietary Guidelines) and (ii) non-ultra-processed or ultra-processed (NOVA). Agreement between the two systems (core vs. non-ultra-processed and discretionary vs. ultra-processed) was evaluated using the kappa statistic.
There was 'moderate' agreement (κ = 0.41, 95% CI: 0.40-0.42) between the Australian Dietary Guidelines and the NOVA system, with 69.8% of products aligned across the two systems. Alignment was more common for discretionary foods (80.6% were ultra-processed) than core foods (59.9% aligned were not-ultra-processed). Food categories exhibiting the strongest levels of alignment included confectionary, foods for specific dietary use, and egg and egg products. Discordance was most common for convenience foods, sugars, honey and related products, and cereal and grain products.
Despite moderate alignment between the Australian Dietary Guidelines and NOVA, the discordance observed for almost one-third of products highlights the opportunity to develop recommendations for ultra-processed foods within the guidelines to advise Australians how these foods should be considered as part of a healthy diet.
澳大利亚膳食指南目前正在修订,超加工食品已被确定为高度优先行动领域。为了更好地了解当前膳食指南与加工分类水平的契合程度,本研究的目的是评估澳大利亚膳食指南与用于对包装食品健康程度进行分类的NOVA分类系统之间的契合度。
数据来源于澳大利亚食品转换数据集,其中包括2022年澳大利亚主要超市中提供的28071种包装食品和饮料产品。产品被分类为:(i) 核心或自由裁量类(澳大利亚膳食指南);(ii) 未超加工或超加工类(NOVA)。使用kappa统计量评估两个系统之间的一致性(核心类与未超加工类以及自由裁量类与超加工类)。
澳大利亚膳食指南与NOVA系统之间存在 “中等程度” 的一致性(κ = 0.41,95% CI:0.40 - 0.42),69.8% 的产品在两个系统中分类一致。自由裁量类食品的一致性更为常见(80.6% 为超加工食品),而核心类食品的一致性则较低(59.9% 分类一致的为未超加工食品)。一致性最强的食品类别包括糖果、特殊膳食用途食品以及蛋类和蛋制品。不一致性最常见于方便食品、糖、蜂蜜及相关产品,以及谷物和谷物制品。
尽管澳大利亚膳食指南与NOVA之间存在中等程度的一致性,但近三分之一产品出现的不一致情况凸显了在指南中针对超加工食品制定建议的机会,以告知澳大利亚人应如何将这些食品视为健康饮食的一部分。