Nutrition Journal | |
Modeling health gains and cost savings for ten dietary salt reduction targets | |
Research | |
Linda J. Cobiac1  Tony Blakely2  Nhung Nghiem2  Christine L. Cleghorn2  Nick Wilson2  Helen Eyles3  Cliona Ni Mhurchu4  Emma Shields5  | |
[1] British Heart Foundation Centre on Population Approaches to NCD Prevention, Oxford University, Oxford, UK;Department of Public Health (BODE3 Programme), Burden of Disease Epidemiology, Equity and Cost-Effectiveness Programme, University of Otago, PO Box 7343, Wellington, Wellington South, New Zealand;National Institute for Health Innovation and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand;National Institute for Health Innovation, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand;University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; | |
关键词: Sodium; Dietary salt; Targets; Economic analysis; Cardiovascular disease; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12937-016-0161-1 | |
received in 2016-01-27, accepted in 2016-04-15, 发布年份 2016 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundDietary salt reduction is included in the top five priority actions for non-communicable disease control internationally. We therefore aimed to identify health gain and cost impacts of achieving a national target for sodium reduction, along with component targets in different food groups.MethodsWe used an established dietary sodium intervention model to study 10 interventions to achieve sodium reduction targets. The 2011 New Zealand (NZ) adult population (2.3 million aged 35+ years) was simulated over the remainder of their lifetime in a Markov model with a 3 % discount rate.ResultsAchieving an overall 35 % reduction in dietary salt intake via implementation of mandatory maximum levels of sodium in packaged foods along with reduced sodium from fast foods/restaurant food and discretionary intake (the “full target”), was estimated to gain 235,000 QALYs over the lifetime of the cohort (95 % uncertainty interval [UI]: 176,000 to 298,000). For specific target components the range was from 122,000 QALYs gained (for the packaged foods target) down to the snack foods target (6100 QALYs; and representing a 34–48 % sodium reduction in such products).All ten target interventions studied were cost-saving, with the greatest costs saved for the mandatory “full target” at NZ$1260 million (US$820 million). There were relatively greater health gains per adult for men and for Māori (indigenous population).ConclusionsThis work provides modeling-level evidence that achieving dietary sodium reduction targets (including specific food category targets) could generate large health gains and cost savings for a national health sector. Demographic groups with the highest cardiovascular disease rates stand to gain most, assisting in reducing health inequalities between sex and ethnic groups.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© Wilson et al. 2016
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202311102443418ZK.pdf | 673KB | download |
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