AI Article Synopsis

  • - Food costs significantly impact the dietary choices of low-income households, leading them to favor processed foods with low nutrient value, which are often high in sugar and unhealthy fats.
  • - The study aimed to analyze Australian foods for nutrient density-to-cost ratios, identify healthier substitutions, and assess food processing levels to improve diet quality and affordability.
  • - Results showed that substituting low nutrient density foods with healthier options led to a 52% improvement in diet quality for adults and 71% for children, while also increasing affordability for low and medium socioeconomic households by up to 27%.

Article Abstract

Food costs are a barrier to healthier diet selections, particularly for low socioeconomic households who regularly choose processed foods containing refined grains, added sugars, and added fats. In this study, the objectives were to: (i) identify the nutrient density-to-cost ratio of Australian foods; (ii) model the impact of substituting foods with lower nutrient density-to-cost ratio with those with the highest nutrient density-to-cost ratio for diet quality and affordability in low and medium socioeconomic households; and (iii) evaluate food processing levels. Foods were categorized, coded for processing level, analysed for nutrient density and cost, and ranked by nutrient density-to-cost ratio. The top quartile of nutrient dense, low-cost foods included 54% unprocessed (vegetables and reduced fat dairy), 33% ultra-processed (fortified wholegrain bread and breakfast cereals <20 g sugars/100 g), and 13% processed (fruit juice and canned legumes). Using substitution modelling, diet quality improved by 52% for adults and 71% for children across all households, while diet affordability improved by 25% and 27% for low and medium socioeconomic households, respectively. The results indicate that the quality and affordability of the Australian diet can be improved when nutritious, low-cost foods are selected. Processing levels in the healthier modelled diets suggest that some ultra-processed foods may provide a beneficial source of nutrition when consumed within national food group recommendations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8198747PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115771DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - Food costs significantly impact the dietary choices of low-income households, leading them to favor processed foods with low nutrient value, which are often high in sugar and unhealthy fats.
  • - The study aimed to analyze Australian foods for nutrient density-to-cost ratios, identify healthier substitutions, and assess food processing levels to improve diet quality and affordability.
  • - Results showed that substituting low nutrient density foods with healthier options led to a 52% improvement in diet quality for adults and 71% for children, while also increasing affordability for low and medium socioeconomic households by up to 27%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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