🍎 Processed foods are an alarm bell. Behind the bright colors and attractive packaging of ready-to-eat, ultra-processed products hides a severe health and psychological crisis. This danger is not limited to weight gain; it extends to the chemical restructuring of the human brain from its formative stages through old age, threatening to have minds wither under the weight of synthetic diets.

Early indoctrination

The first five years of a child's life are the most fragile stage, during which their psychological structure and emotional regulation abilities are formed. The quality of food a child consumes acts as a tool for crafting their personality from within. Every 10% increase in the consumption of ultra-processed foods — such as ready-made meals and sweetened drinks — leads to a tangible increase in behavioral and emotional difficulties in children, according to a recently published study.

The danger lies not only in increased physical activity, but in the creation of an internal struggle. This synthetic fuel is linked to increased psychological pressures such as anxiety and social withdrawal. It can lead to external behavioral outbursts like aggression and hyperactivity that the child cannot control, according to the study. Synthetic additives become a burden that distracts the child's mind, forcing their small brain into a war of attrition against pathways of anxiety and distraction at a time when they need stillness to grow properly.

The consumerism trap

Teenagers and young people fall victim to intensive promotional strategies that make it difficult to resist ultra-processed foods. Globally, 75% of young people are exposed to advertisements for unhealthy food and drinks at least once a week. It does not stop at viewing; 60% of these young people confirmed that these advertisements actually increased their desire to consume those products. They are promoted as rewards, which diverts a child’s will away from healthy choices, as stated in a 2025 UNICEF report.

The majority of packaged foods and drinks in the local market do not meet international health standards, according to a 2024 UNICEF study of thousands of products in the Egyptian market. Data showed that 67% of food products exceed the maximum sodium limits set by the World Health Organization, specifically in essential goods such as packaged bread, cheese, and processed meats.

Locally, this marketing game translates into figures reflecting a consumption boom, as sales of sugar-sweetened beverages and packaged products have jumped by 37% over the last decade. Companies exploit existing legislative gaps, as only 41% of these products commit to placing full nutritional information on their labels. This deprives the consumer of the transparency necessary to evaluate the health content of what they buy, directly contributing to an obesity crisis that already affects 21% of children and adolescents in the country, according to the study.

Premature aging

The repercussions of this dietary pattern don’t stop at childhood nor merely affect brain chemistry; their effects extend to threaten mental integrity in the later stages of life. Excessive consumption of ultra-processed foods is linked to the accelerated deterioration of gray matter and the shrinking of the cerebral cortex.

Furthermore, persisting with this dietary approach increases the probability of developing Parkinson's disease by 76% and dementia by 37%, in addition to doubling the risk of multiple sclerosis, according to a study published by the US National Library of Medicine. This neurological decline was not limited to those most vulnerable to disease, but also affected individuals with a low genetic predisposition.

Potential solutions

As the healthcare crisis continues, several countries have begun to break the link between marketing and consumption through strict regulatory interventions aimed at limiting the spread of ultra-processed foods. In Chile, for example, the state mandated that manufacturers place prominent black warning labels on unhealthy products, which helped record a significant 10% decline in sugar consumption.

Mexico has moved toward tightening deterrent fiscal policies. The government is considering doubling taxes on sugary drinks to reach MXN 3.1 per liter in the 2026 budget to control consumption rates that have reached 166 liters per person annually — a move that could inject an additional USD 2 bn into the state treasury. In the UK, authorities have imposed strict restrictions banning advertisements for unhealthy foods aimed at children on streaming platforms and digital media before 9pm. In short, confronting the health decline resulting from malnutrition requires a legislative framework that places public health above commercial returns.

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