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How Big Food Controls What We Eat And Why It’s Making Us Sick

How Big Food Controls What We Eat And Why It’s Making Us Sick

Big Food manipulates what we eat through ultra-processed products, misleading research, and policy influence—contributing to a rise in obesity, diabetes, and chronic health issues worldwide.

Team Heald

Posted on

Apr 14, 2025

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The Hidden Power of Big Food: Controlling What We Eat and Why It’s Harmful

Walk into any supermarket and you'll find that a handful of corporations control most of the products on the shelves. The food industry today is no longer just about feeding people, it’s about shaping consumer behavior, public health, scientific research, and even national policies.

This isn't just about convenience food. It's about a powerful industry designing addictive products, distorting science, and shifting global food systems in ways that are contributing to a worldwide health crisis. The rise of ultra-processed foods is linked to chronic diseases, nutritional imbalances, and increasingly, to systemic manipulation of how we understand food and health.

Real Food vs. Processed Food: The Battle for Our Health

The difference between real and processed food is more than semantic, it’s biological. Real food includes whole, minimally processed ingredients: vegetables, fruits, whole grains, nuts, and legumes. Processed food, especially ultra-processed food, goes through multiple stages of industrial manipulation, and often contains chemical additives, preservatives, flavor enhancers, and ingredients not found in a home kitchen.

Ultra-processed foods are often calorie-dense, nutrient-poor, and engineered for shelf life and flavor enhancement, not human health. These include sugary beverages, packaged snacks, reconstituted meat products, and many ready-to-eat meals.

A 2019 cohort study published in The BMJ found that a 10% increase in the proportion of ultra-processed food consumption was associated with a 62% higher risk of all-cause mortality. This suggests that chronic consumption of these products significantly impacts long-term health outcomes.

Big Food’s Influence on Science, Research, and Policy

One of the lesser-known aspects of the food industry’s influence is its role in shaping scientific research and public policy. Corporations routinely fund studies that produce favorable outcomes for their products, undermining the objectivity of nutritional science.

This practice is not new. In the 1960s, internal documents revealed that the sugar industry paid researchers to downplay the link between sugar and heart disease while shifting the blame to dietary fats. This research misled public health policy for decades and contributed to widespread dietary confusion.

A 2016 review in JAMA Internal Medicine exposed how the Sugar Research Foundation (now the Sugar Association) sponsored biased research to influence the scientific debate around sugar, minimizing its risks while emphasizing fat as the dietary villain.

Today, Big Food companies continue to sponsor nutrition research and maintain close ties with policymakers and regulatory agencies, shaping guidelines that serve industry interests over public health.

Ultra-Processed Foods: Designed for Addiction and Long-Term Health Damage

One of the most concerning aspects of ultra-processed foods is their deliberate design to be addictive. Food scientists develop these products to optimize what's known as the "bliss point", the perfect combination of sugar, salt, and fat that triggers dopamine release in the brain. These foods hijack natural hunger and satiety signals, encouraging overeating and repeated consumption.

In addition to being hyper-palatable, these products often contain ingredients like emulsifiers, artificial flavors, and stabilizers, many of which have been linked to gut microbiome disruption, inflammation, and metabolic dysfunction.

 This pattern of consumption, excess calories with minimal nutrition, contributes to the global surge in obesity, insulin resistance, cardiovascular diseases, and other chronic conditions.

The Global Impact of Big Food: Food Systems and Worldwide Health

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Big Food is not just a Western issue. As multinational food corporations expand into low- and middle-income countries, they alter traditional diets and displace local food systems with processed, packaged alternatives.

This globalization of ultra-processed food has had significant public health consequences. Rising rates of type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and obesity are now observed in countries where undernutrition was once the primary concern. These changes are often facilitated by aggressive marketing, subsidies, trade agreements, and supply chain domination by global food conglomerates.

This systemic shift benefits corporations but burdens populations with the long-term costs of poor health and strained healthcare systems.

Conclusion: Reclaiming Real Food for a Healthier Future

The dominance of Big Food is a critical public health issue. From manipulating research to engineering food that overrides biological regulation, the industry's influence extends far beyond individual choice. It is structural, strategic, and deeply embedded in global food systems.

But consumers are not powerless. Reclaiming real food means demanding transparency, prioritizing whole foods, supporting local producers, and questioning industry-driven narratives around convenience and health.

It also requires systemic change, policies that support real food production, regulate misleading marketing, and fund independent, unbiased nutritional research.

Understanding how Big Food operates is the first step. Choosing food that nourishes, rather than deceives, is the next.

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