Late eating and shortened fasting are associated with higher ultra-processed food intake across all age groups: a population-based study

Mar 21, 2025European journal of nutrition

Eating late and shorter fasting times are linked to eating more ultra-processed foods in all age groups

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Abstract

The later food intake times were associated with higher consumption of ultra-processed foods.

  • Later first and last food intake times were positively linked to increased consumption of ultra-processed foods.
  • Eating midpoints and caloric midpoints occurring later also correlated with higher ultra-processed food intake.
  • Conversely, later eating times were associated with a decrease in the consumption of unprocessed or minimally processed foods.
  • Shorter overnight fasting periods were negatively associated with ultra-processed food intake and positively linked to unprocessed food consumption.
  • These patterns were consistent across adolescents, adults, and older individuals.

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Full Text

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