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Sources of dietary sodium and implications for a statewide salt reduction initiative in Victoria, Australia

Authors :
Elizabeth Dunford
Jenny Reimers
Sian Armstrong
Bruce Bolam
Caryl A. Nowson
Jacqui Webster
Kristy Bolton
Stephen Jan
Kathy Trieu
Carley A. Grimes
Mark Woodward
Bruce Neal
Source :
British Journal of Nutrition. 123:1165-1175
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2020.

Abstract

In Victoria, Australia, a statewide salt reduction partnership was launched in 2015. The aim was to measure Na intake, food sources of Na (level of processing, purchase origin) and discretionary salt use in a cross-section of Victorian adults prior to a salt reduction initiative. In 2016/2017, participants completed a 24-h urine collection (n338) and a subsample completed a 24-h dietary recall (n142). Participants were aged 41·2 (sd13·9) years, and 56 % were females. Mean 24-h urinary excretion was 138 (95 % CI 127, 149) mmol/d for Na. Salt equivalent was 8·1 (95 % CI 7·4, 8·7) g/d, equating to about 8·9 (95 % CI 8·1, 9·6) g/d after 10 % adjustment for non-urinary losses. Mean 24-h intake estimated by diet recall was 118 (95 % CI 103, 133) mmol/d for Na (salt 6·9 (95 % CI 6·0, 7·8 g/d)). Leading dietary sources of Na were cereal-based mixed dishes (12 %), English muffins, flat/savoury/sweet breads (9 %), regular breads/rolls (9 %), gravies and savoury sauces (7 %) and processed meats (7 %). Over one-third (38 %) of Na consumed was derived from discretionary foods. Half of all Na consumed came from ultra-processed foods. Dietary Na derived from foods was obtained from retail stores (51 %), restaurants and fast-food/takeaway outlets (28 %) and fresh food markets (9 %). One-third (32 %) of participants reported adding salt at the table and 61 % added salt whilst cooking. This study revealed that salt intake was above recommended levels with diverse sources of intake. Results from this study suggest a multi-faceted salt reduction strategy focusing on the retail sector, and food reformulation would most likely benefit Victorians and has been used to inform the ongoing statewide salt reduction initiative.

Details

ISSN :
14752662 and 00071145
Volume :
123
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0239c021a8c75275e8226fcd96bb44b1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/s000711452000032x