Countries outside the United States are not relying on a single model to guide healthier eating. Instead, they are using a mix of approaches:
National Guidelines (sample
Three frameworks are especially useful to compare:
The The NOVA framework was the result of research by Dr Carlos Monteiro at the University of Sao Paulo, and rapidly adopted by the federal government of Brazil in 2014. The NOVA system classifies foods into groups based on how much industrial processing they have undergone, from unprocessed or minimally processed foods to ultra-processed products. Its main value is that it does not ask only, “How much sugar or fat is in this product?” It also asks, “What has been done to this food?”
This matters because many modern metabolic problems are linked not just to one nutrient, but to a broader dietary pattern built around products that are engineered, shelf-stable, rapidly consumed, and often low in fiber and high in added sugar. NOVA has been especially influential in Latin America and in global discussions about ultra-processed foods. In 2026, it influenced the new 2025-2030 USDA Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
Nutri-Score is different. It is a front-of-pack nutrition label that gives foods a summary grade, usually from A to E, based on an algorithm that weighs favorable and unfavorable nutrient features. It is designed to help consumers compare packaged foods quickly. Under current EU rules, front-of-pack nutrition labeling is voluntary at the EU level, though individual countries have adopted or supported systems such as Nutri-Score.
Nutri-Score can be useful for comparing one processed product to another, but it is not the same as NOVA. A food can score relatively well on nutrients and still be industrially formulated. That is why the two systems should be seen as complementary rather than interchangeable. NOVA asks whether a food belongs to the ultra-processed world. Nutri-Score asks how its nutrient profile compares with competing packaged foods.

Latin American public health work has been especially influential in shifting attention toward ultra-processed foods. PAHO has explicitly addressed ultra-processed products and linked them to obesity and noncommunicable disease, while NOVA itself has become central to regional and global discussions of diet quality.
This is one reason Latin America has often been ahead of North America in recognizing that the problem is not just “too many calories,” but the industrial restructuring of the food supply.
Canada offers a different model. Its food policy has to work across a highly diverse population rather than one single inherited dietary pattern. Canada now requires a front-of-package nutrition symbol on many prepackaged foods that meet or exceed set levels for saturated fat, sugars, or sodium. This is a warning-style approach rather than a single summary grade like Nutri-Score.
This matters because it directly highlights products with high sugar content, helping consumers identify foods that may worsen metabolic risk. In a country with many culinary traditions, the practical question becomes not “What is the one correct Canadian diet?” but “How do we help all Canadians recognize and reduce harmful processed food exposures?”
The United Kingdom has taken a relatively explicit position on sugar. The Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition recommended that free sugars should be reduced to no more than 5% of total energy intake. The rationale includes lower risk of excess calorie intake, obesity, and dental disease.
This is important because it gives sugar a clearly defined place in dietary policy, rather than treating it as a minor detail inside a broader discussion of calories.
Australia’s dietary guidelines are food-based and practical. They emphasize enjoying a variety of nutritious foods while also advising people to limit foods containing added sugars, saturated fat, salt, and alcohol. The Australian guideline specifically names discretionary foods such as biscuits, cakes, pastries, confectionery, sugar-sweetened soft drinks, and cordials.
This is not a NOVA-style system, but it does move in the same direction: it recognizes that many of the most harmful products are industrially produced, energy-dense, and nutritionally poor.
The WHO has also pushed the conversation toward healthier food environments through work on front-of-pack labeling, nutrient profile models, and sugar guidance. These tools are designed to help countries identify products high in sugars, salt, and unhealthy fats, and to regulate the food environment more effectively.
Taken together, these international efforts point toward a broader consensus:
Why this matters for metabolic disease
For a site focused on fructose, fatty liver, insulin resistance, and metabolic syndrome, these frameworks are important because they approach the same problem from different angles.
None is perfect on its own. But together they show that many countries are moving toward the same conclusion: diets built around whole or minimally processed foods are metabolically safer than diets dominated by industrial products, especially those high in added sugars.
The international trend is moving away from a narrow focus on single nutrients and toward a broader understanding of the food environment.
NOVA highlights the role of ultra-processed foods.
Nutri-Score helps consumers compare packaged products.
Countries such as Canada, the UK, and Australia are using policy and guideline tools to address sugars and poor-quality processed foods in different ways.
History of Sugar (pre-1984)
Industrial Fructose Era (Post-1984)
Guidelines from Other Countries
Ultra-Processed Foods and the Modern Diet
Metabolic Biochemistry
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