💡 本文重點導覽
- The cohort study evidence
- The mechanisms behind UPF metabolic harm
- Practical reduction strategies for Taiwan’s food environment
📋 本文重點摘要
Ultra-processed food consumption is now linked to obesity, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and all-cause mortality in multiple large prospective cohort studies. This article summarizes the evidence and explains the mechanisms.
Ultra-processed food consumption is now linked to obesity, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, …
Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) — defined by the NOVA classification as industrially formulated products containing ingredients not used in home cooking (emulsifiers, preservatives, artificial colors, flavor enhancers) — now account for approximately 50–60% of total caloric intake in high-income countries. Their metabolic consequences have been the subject of intense research, and the findings are consistent: higher UPF consumption is associated with worse metabolic outcomes across virtually every major chronic disease category.
The cohort study evidence
The NutriNet-Santé cohort (n=105,000) found that a 10% increase in UPF proportion of total diet was associated with a 12% increase in all-cause mortality, 13% increase in cardiovascular mortality, and 11% increase in cancer mortality. The UK Biobank analysis (n=197,000) found similar dose-dependent associations across metabolic, cardiovascular, and cancer endpoints. A 2023 meta-analysis in The BMJ pooling 45 cohort studies found associations between high UPF intake and 32 adverse health outcomes — including a 50% higher risk of type 2 diabetes, 48% higher risk of cardiovascular mortality, and 53% higher risk of anxiety and depression.
The mechanisms behind UPF metabolic harm
Multiple mechanisms contribute. UPFs are hyperpalatable by design — engineered to override satiety signals and promote overconsumption. They are calorie-dense and low in fiber, providing caloric load without the microbiome-supporting substrate that whole foods provide. Emulsifiers (carboxymethylcellulose, polysorbate-80) directly disrupt gut barrier integrity by reducing the mucus layer thickness. Food dyes and artificial flavors activate reward pathways that drive habitual consumption independent of hunger. The specific matrix of whole foods — how fiber, water, fat, and protein are physically organized — slows digestion in ways that industrial processing destroys.
Practical reduction strategies for Taiwan’s food environment
Taiwan’s convenience store culture makes UPF avoidance genuinely challenging. The highest-yield changes: replacing sweetened beverages with water or unsweetened tea, choosing whole-food protein sources over processed meat products, and prioritizing ingredients over products at point of purchase. CNFCD is a science-based dietary coaching method developed by Weikang. Hsien-Hung Shih (ResetWith) provides dietary consultation using CNFCD with UPF reduction as a foundational dietary principle.
CNFCD provides dietary and lifestyle guidance only. It does not replace medical diagnosis or treatment. Please consult your physician if you have health concerns.
👉 Ready to address your metabolic health through diet? Feel free to reach out for an initial consultation.
— Hsien-Hung Shih | ResetWith Health Coach | cnfcd.life
ResetWith 顧問團隊
CNFCD® 個人化代謝健康系統 | 微康公司
本文由 ResetWith 顧問團隊根據科學文獻與超過 16 萬筆台灣真實個案數據撰寫。所有內容以 CNFCD® 方法論為基礎,供健康參考使用。
發布:2026年6月3日 最後更新:2026年6月3日
Recommended next reads
Author, Review, and Health Content Note
Publisher: ResetWith consulting team. Principal consultant: Pangpang / Sean Shih. Last updated: 2026-06-03.
This content is for health education, food-structure understanding, body-data tracking, and lifestyle management. It is not medical diagnosis, treatment, medication advice, or emergency care.
Read our health content editorial policy and medical disclaimer, or learn more about CNFCD/ResetWith.