Cost and health consequences of reducing the population intake of salt
Open Access
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- theory and-methods
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
- Vol. 54 (9) , 697-702
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.54.9.697
Abstract
STUDY OBJECTIVE The aim was to estimate health and economic consequences of interventions aimed at reducing the daily intake of salt (sodium chloride) by 6 g per person in the Norwegian population. Health promotion (information campaigns), development of new industry food recipes, declaration of salt content in food and taxes on salty food/subsidies of products with less salt, were possible interventions. DESIGN The study was a simulation model based on present age and sex specific mortality in Norway and estimated impact of blood pressure reductions on the risks of myocardial infarction and stroke as observed in Norwegian follow up studies. A reduction of 2 mm Hg systolic blood pressure (range 1–4) was assumed through the actual interventions. The cost of the interventions in themselves, welfare losses from taxation of salty food/subsidising of food products with little salt, cost of avoided myocardial infarction and stroke treatment, cost of avoided antihypertensive treatment, hospital costs in additional life years and productivity gains from reduced morbidity and mortality were included. RESULTS The estimated increase in life expectancy was 1.8 months in men and 1.4 in women. The net discounted (5%) cost of the interventions was minus $118 millions (that is, cost saving) in the base case. Sensitivity analyses indicate that the interventions would be cost saving unless the systolic blood pressure reduction were less than 2 mm Hg, productivity gains were disregarded or the welfare losses from price interventions were high. CONCLUSION Population interventions to reduce the intake of salt are likely to improve the population's health and save costs to society.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Costs of coronary heart disease and stroke: the case of SwedenJournal of Internal Medicine, 1999
- Dietary Factors and the Risk of Gastric Cancer in Mexico CityAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1999
- Preinfarction Blood Pressure and Smoking Are Determinants for a Fatal Outcome of Myocardial InfarctionArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1998
- Salt and gastric cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer Prevention, 1998
- The Health Care Costs of SmokingNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- Reproducibility of Ultrasonographically Determined Intima-Media Thickness Is Dependent on Arterial Wall ThicknessStroke, 1997
- Salt intake and blood pressure in the general population: a controlled intervention trial in two townsJournal Of Hypertension, 1988
- A pilot study to test the feasibility of salt restriction in a community.1982
- A COMMUNITY-BASED INTERVENTION STUDY ON THE FEASIBILITY AND EFFECTS OF THE REDUCTION OF SALT INTAKE IN NORTH KARELIA, FINLAND1981
- Foundations of Cost-Effectiveness Analysis for Health and Medical PracticesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977