UECE
UECE 2018
UECE
📚 + 11.550 questões UECE
Comece sua preparação

UECE 2018

T E X T

 

  As growth slows in wealthy countries, Western food companies are aggressively expanding in developing nations, contributing to obesity and health problems. 

  FORTALEZA, Brazil — Children’s squeals rang through the muggy morning air as a woman pushed a gleaming white cart along pitted, trashstrewn streets. She was making deliveries to some of the poorest households in this seaside city, bringing pudding, cookies and other packaged foods to the customers on her sales route.

  Celene da Silva, 29, is one of thousands of door-to-door vendors for Nestlé, helping the world’s largest packaged food conglomerate expand its reach into a quarter-million households in Brazil’s farthestflung corners.

  As she dropped off variety packs of Chandelle pudding, Kit-Kats and Mucilon infant cereal, there was something striking about her customers: Many were visibly overweight, even small children.

  She gestured to a home along her route and shook her head, recalling how its patriarch, a morbidly obese man, died the previous week. “He ate a piece of cake and died in his sleep,” she said.

  Mrs. da Silva, who herself weighs more than 200 pounds, recently discovered that she had high blood pressure, a condition she acknowledges is probably tied to her weakness for fried chicken and the Coca-Cola she drinks with every meal, breakfast included. 

  Nestlé’s direct-sales army in Brazil is part of a broader transformation of the food system that is delivering Western-style processed food and sugary drinks to the most isolated pockets of Latin America, Africa and Asia. As their growth slows in the wealthiest countries, multinational food companies like Nestlé, PepsiCo and General Mills have been aggressively expanding their presence in developing nations, unleashing a marketing juggernaut that is upending traditional diets from Brazil to Ghana to India.

  A New York Times examination of corporate records, epidemiological studies and government reports — as well as interviews with scores of nutritionists and health experts around the world — reveals a sea change in the way food is produced, distributed and advertised across much of the globe. The shift, many public health experts say, is contributing to a new epidemic of diabetes and heart disease, chronic illnesses that are fed by soaring rates of obesity in places that struggled with hunger and malnutrition just a generation ago.

  The new reality is captured by a single, stark fact: Across the world, more people are now obese than underweight. At the same time, scientists say, the growing availability of high-calorie, nutrient-poor foods is generating a new type of malnutrition, one in which a growing number of people are both overweight and undernourished.

  “The prevailing story is that this is the best of all possible worlds — cheap food, widely available. If you don’t think about it too hard, it makes sense,” said Anthony Winson, who studies the political economics of nutrition at the University of Guelph in Ontario. A closer look, however, reveals a much different story, he said. “To put it in stark terms: The diet is killing us.”

  Even critics of processed food acknowledge that there are multiple factors in the rise of obesity, including genetics, urbanization, growing incomes and more sedentary lives. Nestlé executives say their products have helped alleviate hunger, provided crucial nutrients, and that the company has squeezed salt, fat and sugar from thousands of items to make them healthier. But Sean Westcott, head of food research and development at Nestlé, conceded obesity has been an unexpected side effect of making inexpensive processed food more widely available.

  “We didn’t expect what the impact would be,” he said.

  Part of the problem, he added, is a natural tendency for people to overeat as they can afford more food. Nestlé, he said, strives to educate consumers about proper portion size and to make and market foods that balance “pleasure and nutrition.”

  There are now more than 700 million obese people worldwide, 108 million of them children, according to research published recently in The New England Journal of Medicine. The prevalence of obesity has doubled in 73 countries since 1980, contributing to four million premature deaths, the study found.

By ANDREW JACOBS and MATT RICHTEL The New York Times SEPT. 16, 2017 https://www.nytimes.com 

 

Among the multiple factors that contribute to the increase of obesity, the text includes

a

the big size of sandwiches and hamburgers. 

b

many hours in front of the TV screen. 

c

the intake of beer, peanut butter, and potato chips. 

d

urbanization and sedentarism.

Resposta
D
Resolução
Assine a AIO para ter acesso a esta e muitas outras resoluções
Mais de 300.000 questões com resoluções e dados exclusivos disponíveis para alunos AIO.
E mais: nota TRI a todo o momento.
Esta resolução não é pública. Assine a aio para ter acesso a essa resolução e muito mais: Tenha acesso a simulados reduzidos, mais de 200.000 questões, orientação personalizada, video aulas, correção de redações e uma equipe sempre disposta a te ajudar. Tudo isso com acompanhamento TRI em tempo real.
Dicas
expand_more
expand_less
Dicas sobre como resolver essa questão
Erros Comuns
expand_more
expand_less
Alguns erros comuns que estudantes podem cometer ao resolver esta questão
Conceitos chave
Conceitos chave sobre essa questão, que pode te ajudar a resolver questões similares
Estratégia de resolução
Uma estratégia sobre a forma apropriada de se chegar a resposta correta
Resposta Correta D
Dificuldade Média • 63% acertaram
📊

Insights de Estudo

📚 Reading/Writing Língua Estrangeira (Inglês)
🔥 Apareceu em 20 das últimas 24 provas UECE

Taxa de Acerto

63% acerto
💡

Material de Estudo

🔓

Conteúdo Exclusivo

Cadastre-se para ver dicas, estratégias e análise completa desta questão

Criar conta grátis
🎓 Vestibular

🎓 AIO + UECE: Preparação Baseada em Dados

Fizemos o trabalho difícil para você não ter que fazer

📚
11.550
questões UECE
📊
38%
cobertura de tópicos
🎯
0
alunos prep. para UECE
Depoimentos

Transforme seus estudos com a AIO!

Estudantes como você estão acelerando suas aprovações usando nossa plataforma de AI + aprendizado ativo

+25 pts
Aumento médio TRI
4x
Simulados mais rápidos
+80 mil
Estudantes
Avatar
Sarah
Aprovado
Neste ano da minha aprovação, a AIO foi a forma perfeita de eu entender meus pontos fortes e fracos, melhorar minha estratégia de prova e, alcançar uma nota excepcional que me permitiu realizar meu objetivo na universidade dos meus sonhos. Só tenho a agradecer à AIO ... pois com certeza não conseguiria sozinha.
Avatar
Mariana Scheffel
Aprovado
AIO foi fundamental para a evolução do meu número de acertos e notas, tanto no ENEM quanto em outros vestibulares, fornecendo os recursos e as ferramentas necessárias para estudar de forma eficaz e melhorar minhas notas.
Avatar
Débora Adelina
Aprovado
O que mais gostei foi a forma como a plataforma seleciona matérias em que tenho mais dificuldade, ajudando a focar no que realmente preciso de atenção. Ainda não consegui minha aprovação, mas contarei com a AIO por mais um ano pois a plataforma me aproximou desse objetivo tornando meus estudos mais direcionados!
A AIO utiliza cookies para garantir uma melhor experiência. Ver política de privacidade