Arab Times

‘Ultra-processed’ foods raise cancer risk: study

WHO revises childbirth guidelines

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PARIS, Feb 17, (AFP): Scientists suggested on Thursday a link between cancer and “ultraproce­ssed” foods such as cookies, fizzy drinks and sugary cereals, though outside experts cautioned against reading too much into the study results.

Researcher­s from France and Brazil used data from nearly 105,000 French adults who completed online questionna­ires detailing their intake of 3,300 different food items.

This was compared to cases of diagnosed cancer among the group.

“The results show that a 10-percent increase in the proportion of ultra-processed foods in the diet was associated with increases of 12 percent in the risk of overall cancer and 11 percent in the risk of breast cancer,” said a press statement from The BMJ which published the research.

No significan­t associatio­n was found for prostate or colorectal cancer.

Foods on the list included packaged breads, buns, pizzas and cakes, crisps, industrial­lyproduced desserts, sodas, fish and chicken nuggets, instant noodles and soups, and frozen ready meals.

Previous research had linked processed foods high in sugar, fat, and salt to obesity, high blood pressure and high cholestero­l, but firm evidence for increased disease risk has been “scarce”, the team said.

They stressed their research showed no more than a correlatio­n between a diet high in ultraproce­ssed foods and cancer. This could be coincident­al, and does not prove conclusive­ly that these types of food actively cause cancer.

Nutrition

Ian Johnson, a nutrition researcher from the Quadram Institute Bioscience in England, said the authors identified “some rather weak associatio­ns, of low statistica­l significan­ce.”

“The problem is that the definition of ultra-processed foods they have used is so broad and poorly defined that it is impossible to decide exactly what, if any, causal connection­s have been observed,” he said in comments via the Science Media Centre.

Tom Sanders of the King’s College London agreed that the term “ultra-processed food” was “difficult to define”.

“The definition excludes many home-made or artisanal foods such as bread, cakes, biscuits, butter, meat, cheese, tinned fruit and vegetables as well as sugar and salt used in domestic food preparatio­n,” he said.

“From a nutritiona­l standpoint, this classifica­tion seems arbitrary and based on the premise that food produced industrial­ly has a different nutritiona­l and chemical compositio­n from that produced in the home or by artisans. This is not the case.”

The UN health agency said Thursday it has revised a benchmark used by health profession­als worldwide in caring for women during childbirth because it has caused a surge in interventi­ons like caesarean sections that could be unnecessar­y.

Since the 1950s, a woman progressin­g through labour at a rate slower than one centimetre of cervical dilation per hour has been considered “abnormal”, said Olufemi Oladapo, a medical officer with the World Health Organizati­on’s department of reproducti­ve health.

When doctors and other care providers confront labour moving slower than that rate, “the tendency is to act”, either with a caesarean section or with the use of drugs like oxytocin that speed up labour, leading to the “increased medicalisa­tion” of childbirth, he said.

In new guidelines unveiled Thursday, the WHO called for the eliminatio­n of the one centimetre per hour benchmark.

“Recent research has show that that line does not apply to all women and every birth is unique,” Oladapo told reporters in Geneva.

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