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International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2017

Review of behaviour change interventions to reduce population salt intake.

Kathy Trieu; Emma McMahon; Joseph Alvin Santos; Adrian Bauman; Kellie-Ann Jolly; Bruce Bolam; Jacqui Webster

BackgroundExcess salt intake is a major cause of raised blood pressure—the leading risk factor for death and disability worldwide. Although behaviour change interventions such as awareness campaigns and health education programs are implemented to reduce salt intake, their effectiveness is unclear. This global systematic review investigates the impact of population-level behaviour change interventions that aim to reduce salt intake.MethodsA search for published and grey literature was conducted using PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, Web of Science, Sage, Scopus, OpenGrey, Google Scholar and other relevant organizations’ websites. Studies were included if 1) published between 2005 and 2015; 2) the education or awareness-raising interventions were aimed at the population or sub-population and 3) salt intake and/or salt-related behaviours were outcome measures. Study and intervention characteristics were extracted for the descriptive synthesis and study quality was assessed.ResultsTwenty two studies involving 41,448 participants were included. Most were conducted in high income countries (n = 16), targeting adults (n = 21) in the general population (n = 16). Behaviour change interventions were categorised as health education interventions (n = 14), public awareness campaigns (n = 4) and multi-component interventions (including both health education and awareness campaigns, n = 4). 19 of the 22 studies demonstrated significant reductions in estimated salt intake and/or improvement in salt-related behaviours. All studies showed high risk of bias in one or more domains. Of the 10 higher quality studies, 5 found a significant effect on salt intake or salt behaviours based on the more objective outcome assessment method.ConclusionBased on moderate quality of evidence, population-level behaviour change interventions can improve salt-related behaviours and/or reduce salt intake. However, closer analysis of higher quality studies show inconsistent evidence of the effectiveness and limited effect sizes suggest the implementation of education and awareness-raising interventions alone are unlikely to be adequate in reducing population salt intake to the recommended levels. A framework which guides rigorous research and evaluation of population-level interventions in real-world settings would help understand and support more effective implementation of interventions to reduce salt intake.


Journal of Clinical Hypertension | 2016

Effectiveness of a Communication for Behavioral Impact (COMBI) Intervention to Reduce Salt Intake in a Vietnamese Province Based on Estimations From Spot Urine Samples.

Ha Thi Phuong Do; Joseph Alvin Santos; Kathy Trieu; Kristina S. Petersen; Mai Bach Le; Duc Truong Lai; Adrian Bauman; Jacqui Webster

This study evaluated the effectiveness of the Communication for Behavioral Impact (COMBI)–Eat Less Salt intervention conducted in Viet Tri, Vietnam. The behavior change intervention was implemented in four wards and four communes for one year, which included mass media communication, school interventions, community programs, and focus on high‐risk groups. Mean sodium excretion was estimated from spot urine samples using different equations. A subsample provided 24‐hour urine to validate estimates from spot urine. Information about salt‐related knowledge and behaviors was also collected. There were 513 participants at both baseline and follow‐up. Mean sodium excretion estimated from spot urines fell significantly from 8.48 g/d at baseline to 8.05 g/d at follow‐up (P=.001). All spot equations demonstrated a significant reduction in sodium levels; however, the change was smaller than the measured 24‐hour urine. Participants showed improved knowledge and behaviors following the intervention. The COMBI intervention was effective in lowering average population salt intake and improving knowledge and behaviors.


Journal of Clinical Hypertension | 2016

The Science of Salt: A Regularly Updated Systematic Review of the Implementation of Salt Reduction Interventions (November 2015 to February 2016)

Kathy Trieu; Rachael McLean; Claire Johnson; Joseph Alvin Santos; Thout Sudhir Raj; Norm R.C. Campbell; Jacqui Webster

The objective of this periodic review was to identify, summarize, and appraise studies relating to the implementation of salt reduction strategies that were retrieved between November 2015 and February 2016. From the established MEDLINE search, 56 studies were identified as relevant to the implementation of salt reduction initiatives. Detailed appraisal was performed on seven studies that evaluated the impact of salt reduction interventions. While study quality varied, all had one or more risks related to bias. There was consistent evidence, from three studies, demonstrating that setting‐based structural interventions to improve the nutritional composition of foods were effective in reducing salt but mixed evidence in relation to the effectiveness of behavioral interventions. The development of an evaluation guidance framework that supports scientific rigor and external validity would aid future design and interpretation of studies evaluating salt reduction interventions, particularly for low‐resource countries.


Journal of Clinical Hypertension | 2016

The Science of Salt: A Regularly Updated Systematic Review of the Implementation of Salt Reduction Interventions (June–October 2015)

Kathy Trieu; Rachael McLean; Claire Johnson; Joseph Alvin Santos; Blake Angell; JoAnne Arcand; Thout Sudhir Raj; Norm R.C. Campbell; Michelle M.Y. Wong; Alexander A. Leung; Bruce Neal; Jacqui Webster

From the George Institute for Global Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Departments of Preventive & Social Medicine/Human Nutrition, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand; Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa, ON, Canada; The George Institute for Global Health India, Hyderabad, India; Department of Medicine, Physiology and Pharmacology and Community Health Sciences, O’Brien Institute for Public Health and Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Arbor Research Collaborative for Health, Ann Arbor, MI; Department of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; and The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia


Public Health Nutrition | 2017

Dietary salt intake in the Australian population.

Joseph Alvin Santos; Jacqui Webster; Mary-Anne Land; Victoria M. Flood; John Chalmers; Mark Woodward; Bruce Neal; Kristina S. Petersen

OBJECTIVE To update the estimate of mean salt intake for the Australian population made by the Australian Health Survey (AHS). DESIGN A secondary analysis of the data collected in a cross-sectional survey was conducted. Estimates of salt intake were made in Lithgow using the 24 h diet recall methodology employed by the AHS as well as using 24 h urine collections. The data from the Lithgow sample were age- and sex-weighted, to provide estimates of daily salt intake for the Australian population based upon (i) the diet recall data and (ii) the 24 h urine samples. SETTING Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia. SUBJECTS Individuals aged ≥20 years residing in Lithgow and listed on the 2009 federal electoral roll. RESULTS Mean (95 % CI) salt intake estimated from the 24 h diet recalls was 6·4 (6·2, 6·7) g/d for the Lithgow population compared with a corresponding figure of 6·2 g/d for the Australian population derived from the AHS. The corresponding estimate of salt intake for Lithgow adults based upon the 24 h urine collections was 9·0 (8·6, 9·4) g/d. When the age- and sex-specific estimates of salt intake obtained from the 24 h urine collections in the Lithgow sample were weighted using Australian census data, estimated salt intake for the Australian population was 9·0 (8·6, 9·5) g/d. Further adjustment for non-urinary Na excretion made the best estimate of daily salt intake for both Lithgow and Australia about 9·9 g/d. CONCLUSIONS The dietary recall method used by the AHS likely substantially underestimated mean population salt consumption in Australia.


Journal of Clinical Hypertension | 2017

The Science of Salt: A regularly updated systematic review of the implementation of salt reduction interventions (March-August 2016)

Joseph Alvin Santos; Kathy Trieu; Thout Sudhir Raj; JoAnne Arcand; Claire Johnson; Jacqui Webster; Rachael McLean

This review aims to identify, summarize, and appraise studies reporting on the implementation of salt reduction interventions that were published between March and August 2016. Overall, 40 studies were included: four studies evaluated the impact of salt reduction interventions, while 36 studies were identified as relevant to the design, assessment, and implementation of salt reduction strategies. Detailed appraisal and commentary were undertaken on the four studies that measured the impact of the interventions. Among them, different evaluation approaches were adopted; however, all demonstrated positive health outcomes relating to dietary salt reduction. Three of the four studies measured sodium in breads and provided consistent evidence that sodium reduction in breads is feasible and different intervention options are available. None of the studies were conducted in low‐ or lower middle–income countries, which stresses the need for more resources and research support for the implementation of salt reduction interventions in these countries.


Journal of Clinical Hypertension | 2016

The Science of Salt: A Regularly Updated Systematic Review of Salt and Health Outcomes (August to November 2015)

Michelle M.Y. Wong; JoAnne Arcand; Alexander A. Leung; Thout Sudhir Raj; Kathy Trieu; Joseph Alvin Santos; Norm R.C. Campbell

The purpose of this review was to systematically identify, summarize, and critically appraise studies on dietary salt relating to health outcomes that were published from August to November 2015. The search strategy was adapted from a previous systematic review on dietary salt and health. Overall, 15 studies were included in the review: one study assessed cardiovascular events, five studies assessed blood pressure or hypertension incidence, six studies assessed surrogate outcomes for cardiovascular or kidney diseases, and three studies assessed other outcomes (age‐related cataracts, rheumatoid arthritis, and bone mineral density, respectively). Four studies were selected for detailed appraisal and commentary.


Nutrients | 2018

Process Evaluation and Costing of a Multifaceted Population-Wide Intervention to Reduce Salt Consumption in Fiji

Jacqui Webster; Arti Pillay; Arleen Suku; Paayal Gohil; Joseph Alvin Santos; Jimaima Schultz; Jillian Wate; Kathy Trieu; Silvia Hope; Wendy Snowdon; Marj Moodie; Stephen Jan; Colin Bell

This paper reports the process evaluation and costing of a national salt reduction intervention in Fiji. The population-wide intervention included engaging food industry to reduce salt in foods, strategic health communication and a hospital program. The evaluation showed a 1.4 g/day drop in salt intake from the 11.7 g/day at baseline; however, this was not statistically significant. To better understand intervention implementation, we collated data to assess intervention fidelity, reach, context and costs. Government and management changes affected intervention implementation, meaning fidelity was relatively low. There was no active mechanism for ensuring food companies adhered to the voluntary salt reduction targets. Communication activities had wide reach but most activities were one-off, meaning the overall dose was low and impact on behavior limited. Intervention costs were moderate (FJD


Journal of Hypertension | 2017

Estimating population salt intake in India using spot urine samples.

Kristina S. Petersen; Claire Johnson; Sailesh Mohan; Kris Rogers; Roopa Shivashankar; Sudhir Raj Thout; Priti Gupta; Feng J. He; Graham A. MacGregor; Jacqui Webster; Joseph Alvin Santos; Anand Krishnan; Pallab K. Maulik; K. Srinath Reddy; Ruby Gupta; Dorairaj Prabhakaran; Bruce Neal

277,410 or


Journal of Hypertension | 2018

Effects of a nationwide strategy to reduce salt intake in Samoa

Kathy Trieu; Merina Ieremia; Joseph Alvin Santos; Bruce Neal; Mark Woodward; Marjory Moodie; Colin Bell; Wendy Snowdon; Taiaopo Faumuina; Jacqui Webster

0.31 per person) but the strategy relied on multi-sector action which was not fully operationalised. The cyclone also delayed monitoring and likely impacted the results. However, 73% of people surveyed had heard about the campaign and salt reduction policies have been mainstreamed into government programs. Longer-term monitoring of salt intake is planned through future surveys and lessons from this process evaluation will be used to inform future strategies in the Pacific Islands and globally.

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Jacqui Webster

The George Institute for Global Health

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Kathy Trieu

The George Institute for Global Health

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Claire Johnson

University of Western Australia

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JoAnne Arcand

University of Ontario Institute of Technology

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Bruce Neal

The George Institute for Global Health

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Thout Sudhir Raj

The George Institute for Global Health

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Emma McMahon

Princess Alexandra Hospital

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Kristina S. Petersen

University of South Australia

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