01/08/2026
No matter your diet, make it whole.
Mediterranean, paleo, plant‑forward, low‑carb, or gluten‑free, research keeps showing the same thing: moving from ultra‑processed to whole foods improves health markers across the board.
What the science says:
- “Ultra‑processed diets caused excess energy intake and weight gain” in a head‑to‑head metabolic ward trial, despite matched macros.
- Higher UPF intake is associated with higher all‑cause mortality and cardiovascular disease.
- UPF consumption is linked with greater risk of depression and anxiety.
How to put it into practice (Rule of Thirds style)
- Build plates with protein + vegetables + whole‑food carbs, plus healthy fats.
- Shop the perimeter: meat/eggs/seafood, produce, bulk nuts/beans, dairy or fermented foods.
- Read labels: 5-ish recognizable ingredients? Likely OK. Long lists with emulsifiers, gums, dyes, “flavors”? Leave it.
- Cook once, eat twice: batch‑cook protein and veggies; keep fruit, nuts, and yogurt on hand.
Small shift, big payoff: swap one packaged item per day for a whole‑food option and you’ll feel the difference in energy, cravings, and mood.
Sources:
Hall KD et al. Cell Metabolism, 2019. Randomized inpatient trial of UPF vs unprocessed. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2019.05.008
Rico‑Campà A et al. BMJ, 2019. UPF and all‑cause mortality. https://www.bmj.com/content/365/bmj.l1949
Lane MM et al. Nutrients, 2022. UPF and depression/anxiety. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9268228/