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Quantifying the impact of the Public Health Responsibility Deal on salt intake, cardiovascular disease and gastric cancer burdens: interrupted time series and microsimulation study

Authors :
Martin O'Flaherty
Kate M. Fleming
Brendan Collins
Modi Mwatsama
Anthony A Laverty
Paraskevi Seferidi
Christopher Millett
Eszter P. Vamos
Chris Kypridemos
Paul Cairney
Simon Capewell
Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard
Source :
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, J Epidemiol Community Health, JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMJ, 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundIn 2011, England introduced the Public Health Responsibility Deal (RD), a public-private partnership (PPP) which gave greater freedom to the food industry to set and monitor targets for salt intakes. We estimated the impact of the RD on trends in salt intake and associated changes in cardiovascular disease (CVD) and gastric cancer (GCa) incidence, mortality and economic costs in England from 2011–2025.MethodsWe used interrupted time series models with 24 hours' urine sample data and the IMPACTNCD microsimulation model to estimate impacts of changes in salt consumption on CVD and GCa incidence, mortality and economic impacts, as well as equity impacts.ResultsBetween 2003 and 2010 mean salt intake was falling annually by 0.20 grams/day among men and 0.12 g/d among women (P-value for trend both < 0.001). After RD implementation in 2011, annual declines in salt intake slowed statistically significantly to 0.11 g/d among men and 0.07 g/d among women (P-values for differences in trend both P < 0.001). We estimated that the RD has been responsible for approximately 9900 (interquartile quartile range (IQR): 6700 to 13,000) additional cases of CVD and 1500 (IQR: 510 to 2300) additional cases of GCa between 2011 and 2018. If the RD continues unchanged between 2019 and 2025, approximately 26 000 (IQR: 20 000 to 31,000) additional cases of CVD and 3800 (IQR: 2200 to 5300) cases of GCa may occur.InterpretationPublic-private partnerships such as the RD which lack robust and independent target setting, monitoring and enforcement are unlikely to produce optimal health gains.

Details

ISSN :
14702738 and 0143005X
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b12858d8e95ada5405f1a1ec44c10b4a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2018-211749