The Nova food classification system has become highly influential in nutritional epidemiology, linking negative health outcomes to "ultra-processed foods" based on industrial formulation. It assumes that products made with substances and processes uncommon in home cooking form a distinct and inherently harmful category. This analysis evaluates whether industrial formulation is a valid basis for causal claims in food classification and public health policy. Drawing on epidemiology, food systems economics, and research on dietary behavior, I assess whether this criterion captures meaningful variation beyond nutrient content. The evidence suggests a temporal and causal error. Nova treats manufacturing practices as primary drivers of consumption without adequately addressing prior structural conditions such as labor market shifts, time scarcity, income inequality, and urban food constraints that shape demand for convenient, energy-dense products. The commercial intent criterion offers little discrimination, since all commercial foods are produced for profit. Empirical research indicates that socioeconomic status, food access, and time availability predict dietary patterns more strongly than processing category. In addition, Nova coding in large datasets relies mainly on ingredient-based proxies, creating confounding between nutrient profile and processing class. Effective food policy should prioritize nutritional quality, access, and equity rather than process-based taxonomy.
Jimmy Chun Yu Louie (Thu,) studied this question.