Vietnam Supplies Laos 50 Million Litres Of Fuel As Thailand Cuts Exports 25 Percent

Laos imports all its refined fuel and sources 97 percent from Thailand. When Thailand cut exports, the country had nowhere else to turn fast.

ASEAN Ministers Warn Of Energy Inflation As IEA Releases Record 400 Million Barrels

The IEA released 400 million barrels on March 11, its largest emergency action ever, more than double the post-Ukraine intervention in 2022.

MT Dapeng Princess Delivers Fifth LNG Cargo To Yangon, Sustaining 500 MW Of Industrial Power

Myanmar's fifth LNG delivery to Thilawa sustains 500 MW for Yangon's industrial zones, with a sixth cargo due in April.

Indonesia And Japan Sign Five-Year Nuclear Energy And Critical Minerals MoC At Tokyo Energy Forum

The Legok Nangka waste-to-energy plant and Sarulla geothermal project remain active under AZEC. The March 15 MoC adds nuclear to a bilateral energy agenda that already spans geothermal, LNG, coal, and critical minerals.
SEND TO: pressreleases@pageonemedia.ph

Study Links Ultra-Processed Foods To Faster Biological Ageing And Increased Health Risks

Ayon sa Monash University, ang labis na pagkain ng mga ultra-processed foods ay nagpapabilis ng biological ageing, na may mga panganib na nauugnay sa kalusugan.

Study Links Ultra-Processed Foods To Faster Biological Ageing And Increased Health Risks

7701
7701

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

A recent cross-sectional study by Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, found that increased consumption of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) such as chocolates, chips, and instant noodles causes consumers to age faster.

Published in the journal ‘Age and Ageing’, the study revealed that for every 10 per cent increase in UPFs consumption, participants were 0.21 years biologically older. The study gathered data from 16,055 people from the US aged 20-79.

UPFs include ice cream, carbonated drinks, biscuits, ready-to-eat meals, sausages, burgers, chicken and fish nuggets, sweet or savoury packaged snacks, and energy bars.

First author Dr Barbara Cardoso from Monash University’s Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food and Monash Victorian Heart Institute said the association between UPFs and markers of biological ageing was understudied, despite the adverse health effects of UPFs.

“The significance of our findings is tremendous, as our predictions show that for every 10 per cent increase in ultra-processed food consumption there is a nearly two per cent increased risk of mortality and 0.5 per cent risk of incident chronic disease over two years,” she said.

The study indicated that the association could be due to other factors such as lower intake of flavonoids or phytoestrogens, which occur in natural foods such as fresh fruit and vegetables, or higher exposure to packaging chemicals and compounds formed during food processing.

“Our findings show that reducing ultra-processed foods in the diet may help slow the biological ageing trajectory, bringing another reason to target ultra-processed foods when considering strategies to promote healthy ageing,” Cardoso said, stressing the importance of eating as many unprocessed and minimally processed foods as possible.

H/T: Monash University