2020
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2020.1858751
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Exclusive reductionism, chronic diseases and nutritional confusion: the degree of processing as a lever for improving public health

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Cited by 22 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…FDBs continue evolving, as does the knowledge on the chemical nature of food components and the mechanisms by which they exert influence on health and disease. FDBs remain central in nutritional research and guidance, despite the increasing awareness on the complexity and knowledge gaps of the role of food components and their interactions within food matrix [ 21 ], suggesting that a nutrient does not have the same health effects depending on the matrix in which it is embedded [ 22 ]. Because of that, FDBs are more and more comprehensive and interlinked, providing information on a growing list of features.…”
Section: Main Features and Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…FDBs continue evolving, as does the knowledge on the chemical nature of food components and the mechanisms by which they exert influence on health and disease. FDBs remain central in nutritional research and guidance, despite the increasing awareness on the complexity and knowledge gaps of the role of food components and their interactions within food matrix [ 21 ], suggesting that a nutrient does not have the same health effects depending on the matrix in which it is embedded [ 22 ]. Because of that, FDBs are more and more comprehensive and interlinked, providing information on a growing list of features.…”
Section: Main Features and Historical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If FDBs are specifically useful for balancing a diet for nutrient composition and fully addressing nutritional needs in human studies, they, however, reflect a reductionist view of foods, viewed as only the sum of nutrients [ 61 ], not considering the food matrix effect, and hence, the degree of processing [ 22 ]. Therefore, to be a relevant tool regarding human health in the long term, their data should not be used alone, but other parameters should be also considered, such as food form and degree of processing, together with other important food properties.…”
Section: Main Limitations Of Food Databases: Missing Dimensions For Human Health?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This suggests that, when it comes to assessing the healthfulness of foods and the impact of diet on human health and disease, traditional nutrient-based systems that focus on nutritional content, quality and safety characteristics may perform better than processing-based evaluation systems that focus on industrial formulation [31]. It is, of course, likely that considering both the nutritional content and aspects of food processing in combined food evaluation metrics, within a more holistic approach to food and diet, will be more informative [32]; attempts in this direction are currently under way (see Section 4.2).…”
Section: Relationship Between Food Processing Nutritional Value and Health Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%