Abstract

The NOVA classification is based on the extent and purpose of industrial processing of foods and beverages. It is increasingly used by health authorities as an effective proxy for the healthiness of these products. In particular, the consumption of ultra-processed food and beverage products (UPP) is associated with an increased risk of developing non-communicable diseases. NOVA has also been criticised. In this paper, our hypothesis was that this criticism came from individuals who had relationships with the UPP industry, one way or another. Between August and December 2018, we undertook a series of searches on PubMed, Google and Web of Science, to map the relationships between these individuals and the UPP industry. In total, we identified thirty-two materials criticising the NOVA classification, most of which were non-peer-reviewed. We identified 38 individuals as authors of these documents, among which we found 33 who had relationships with the UPP industry. Among the five individuals for whom we found no relationships with the industry, three were recent graduates and one had no known affiliation. During our analysis, we identified three types of relationships. The first one was when these individuals directly worked with the industry. The second type of relationship was conflicts of interest that individuals declared in their publications, or that they did not declare, but that we found online. The third type of relationship was when the organisations that hosted or presented the criticism of NOVA had relationships with the UPP industry. This study showed that there is currently a need for greater transparency in research and scientific reviews, as many of these relationships were not declared in the materials criticising NOVA.

Highlights

  • Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) are the leading cause of mortality, globally (World Health Organization 2014)

  • Platforms where NOVA was criticised and relationships with the ultra-processed food and beverage products (UPP) industry we identified that many organisations who hosted/published a criticism of the NOVA classification had relationships with the UPP industry

  • We identified four journals in which a criticism of NOVA was published and that had no relationship with the UPP industry, to our knowledge: “Public Health Nutrition”, “Medecine des maladies metaboliques”, “Food and Nutrition Sciences”, and “Nutrients”

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Summary

Introduction

Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) are the leading cause of mortality, globally (World Health Organization 2014). UPP, in Group 4, are “formulations made mostly or entirely from substances derived from foods and additives” and their consumption has been linked to “unhealthy dietary nutrient profiles and several diet-related non-communicable diseases” (Monteiro et al 2018). This type of classification is increasingly recognised as an effective proxy for the healthiness of these products (Moubarac et al 2014; Monteiro et al 2018a; Fiolet et al 2018). This classification is used in the Uruguayan dietary guidelines (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations 2016) and was cited in a Senate report in Canada (Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs 2016) and by the French High Council of Public Health in its recommendations for the new French dietary guidelines (Haut Conseil de la Santé Publique 2018)

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