超加工食品の依存性を示す研究(Ultra-processed food addiction is a public health crisis)

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2025-07-28 ミシガン大学

ミシガン大学の研究によると、チップスやソーダなどの超加工食品は依存症と同様の行動を引き起こし、公衆衛生上の危機となっている。これらの食品は過食、耐性、離脱症状などを誘発し、肥満や糖尿病、うつ病、早期死亡のリスクと関連。食糧不安のある層では影響が特に大きい。現在、公式な診断基準に含まれていないが、今後は規制や政策介入の対象となる可能性がある。

<関連情報>

今こそ、超加工食品への依存を認識し、対応する時です
Now is the time to recognize and respond to addiction to ultra-processed foods

Erica M. LaFata,Alyssa J. Moran,Nora D. Volkow & Ashley N. Gearhardt
Nature Medicine  Published:25 July 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-03858-6

The idea that certain ultra-processed foods — such as candy, cookies, and chips — can be addictive is receiving increasing attention in the USA and elsewhere. During the past two years, Congressional hearings have addressed the role of addictive ultra-processed foods in escalating rates of childhood chronic diseases. In December 2024, a lawsuit was filed in Philadelphia, accusing 11 ultra-processed-food companies of designing addictive food products and aggressively marketing them toward children.

Reflecting the growing consensus that addiction science could inform food policy, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and National Institutes of Health (NIH) have announced a new initiative modeled on the successful Tobacco Regulatory Science Program, which will unite both agencies’ expertise to “transform nutrition and food-related research”. That certain foods can trigger addictive behavior consistent with substance-use disorders (SUDs) is accepted by many addiction scientists and supported by evidence of neurobiological overlap with the brain circuits and molecular targets implicated in ‘classical’ drug addictions1. Yet addiction to ultra-processed food is not formally recognized by medical classification systems, including the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)2 and the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). This is an oversight with major consequences for public health.

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