ACC Study Links Ultra-Processed Foods to 67% Higher Heart Disease Risk
AI SummaryWTOP7h agoUnited States
Image: WTOP
β’A new American College of Cardiology study of over 6,800 U.S. adults shows consuming more than nine daily servings of ultra-processed foods raises heart attack, stroke, or death risk by 67% compared to one serving.
β’Each additional serving increases risk by over 5% overall and more than 6% among Black Americans, with findings presented at the ACC Annual Scientific Session in New Orleans on March 28-30.
β’Dr. Michele Arthurs of Kaiser Permanente advises checking labels and strategies like pre-eating healthy meals or pairing chips with oranges to cut intake.
β’Results published in JACC Advances highlight the need for dietary shifts to curb cardiovascular events.
β’ U.S. health care and social assistance sectors added 693,000 jobs in 2025, accounting for all net employment gains and preventing a 570,000 job loss in the broader economy.
β’ Despite the growth, experts warn it conceals a productivity crisis driven by administrative burdens, outdated technology, and inefficient care delivery models.
β’ The commentary urges policy reforms to boost efficiency, as unchecked spending threatens fiscal sustainability amid aging populations.
β’ Major U.S. health insurers are limiting coverage of GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy to their original FDA-approved use for diabetes management, excluding weight loss treatments.
β’ According to industry analyst Andy, this shift reverses prior expansions amid rising costs and supply shortages, affecting millions of patients seeking obesity care.
β’ The policy change aims to control spending on these high-demand medications, which have seen off-label use surge, potentially pushing patients toward alternatives or out-of-pocket payments.
β’ One in 10 Americans who held Affordable Care Act plans last year dropped health insurance entirely after federal subsidies expired, according to a survey by the health policy think tank KFF.
β’ The expiration of federal subsidies has forced millions to make difficult choices about maintaining coverage, with significant gaps now in the insurance market.
β’ Hannah Frigand, senior director of the HelpLine for Health Care for All in Massachusetts, highlighted the tough decisions people face regarding health insurance plans in the post-subsidy environment.
β’ U.S. health insurers are prioritizing improved underwriting performance as a strategic focus for 2026, according to analysis from AM Best.
β’ The industry shift reflects efforts to optimize pricing accuracy and risk assessment amid changing market conditions.
β’ Enhanced underwriting performance represents a key metric for insurers managing profitability and competitive positioning in the health insurance market.
β’ The leading U.S. medical school accreditation body, LCME, removed language from its 2027-2028 standards requiring schools to teach about health inequities and disparities.
β’ The previous standards mandated instruction on "health care disparities" and "approaches to reduce health care inequities," which were replaced with language on self-directed learning skills.
β’ The change comes as the Trump Department of Justice probes three medical schools, amid growing political pressure on diversity and equity initiatives in medical education.
β’ A new COVID variant is under monitoring as medical experts assess potential health risks and transmission patterns.
β’ Dr. Alok Patel of Stanford Children's Health discussed emerging trends in AI-driven health advice and its growing adoption among patients.
β’ The simultaneous focus on variant surveillance and AI health tools reflects evolving healthcare delivery and disease monitoring approaches.
β’ The Trump administration issued sweeping regulations in February targeting what Obamacare critics characterize as fraud incentives within the Affordable Care Act framework.
β’ The regulatory package represents a coordinated effort to address alleged vulnerabilities in the ACA subsidy and enrollment systems.
β’ The administration claims the measures represent successes in anti-fraud enforcement while critics argue they restrict legitimate access to coverage.
β’ U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed an E. coli outbreak with illnesses in several states including Texas and Florida, over half affecting children under age 5 as of March 27, 2026.
β’ Three people hospitalized and one developed hemolytic uremic syndrome, a dangerous kidney infection, amid ongoing investigations into the source.
β’ The outbreak underscores vulnerabilities in food safety systems, particularly for young children, prompting heightened surveillance and public alerts.
β’ National Institutes of Health unveiled a five-year disability research plan on March 26, 2026, shifting from medical cures to addressing environmental and social barriers.
β’ Plan promotes inclusive approaches to improve quality of life for millions with disabilities across the U.S.
β’ Marks broader federal pivot toward societal factors in disability, influencing future funding and studies.
β’ HHS and CMS announced new members for the Healthcare Advisory Committee on March 27, 2026, to enhance patient care and modernize U.S. healthcare.
β’ Committee focuses on policy recommendations for efficiency, innovation, and better outcomes nationwide.
β’ Initiative aims to address systemic challenges amid evolving public health needs.
β’ International medical graduates play a vital role in addressing the U.S. physician shortage projected at 86,000 by 2036, particularly for Medicare patients and underserved communities.
β’ The American Medical Association's March 27, 2026 National Advocacy Update calls on representatives to co-sponsor H.R. legislation to support these essential workers.
β’ This effort aims to ensure adequate healthcare workforce amid growing demands from aging populations and expanded coverage.