Slashing salt can save lives – and it won’t hurt your hip pocket or tastebuds

Each year, more than 2,500 Australians die from diseases linked to eating too much salt.

We shouldn’t be putting up with so much unnecessary illness, mainly from heart disease and strokes, and so many deaths.

As a new Grattan Institute report shows, there are practical steps the federal government can take to save lives, reduce health spending and help the economy.



We eat too much salt, with deadly consequences​

Eating too much salt is bad for your health. It raises blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.

About one in three Australians has high blood pressure, and eating too much salt is the biggest individual contributor.

Unfortunately, the average Australian eats far too much salt – almost double the recommended daily maximum of 5 grams, equivalent to a teaspoon.

Australian governments know excessive salt intake is a big problem. That’s why in 2021 they set a target to reduce salt intake by at least 30% by 2030.

It’s an ambitious and worthy goal. But we’re still eating too much salt and we don’t have the policies to change that.


file-20230926-21-zehbrc.png

Grattan Institute/AIHW





Most of the salt we eat is added to food during manufacturing​

Most of the salt Australians eat doesn’t come from the shaker on the table. About three-quarters of it is added to food during manufacturing.

This salt is hidden in everyday staples such as bread, cheese and processed meats. Common foods such as ready-to-eat pasta meals or a ham sandwich can have up to half our total recommended salt intake.


file-20230926-25-w4cu54.png

Grattan Institute/Woolworths



Salt limits are the best way to cut salt intake​

Reducing the amount of salt added to food during manufacturing is the most effective way to reduce intake.

Salt limits can help us do that. They work by setting limits on how much salt can be added to different kinds of food, such as bread or biscuits. To meet these limits, companies need to change the recipes of their products, reducing the amount of salt.


file-20231017-25-bh0m9p.jpg

Food manufacturers can reduce the salt content of their food. Shutterstock



Under salt limits, the United Kingdom reduced salt intake by 20% in about a decade. South Africa is making even faster gains. Salt limits are cheap and easy to implement, and can get results quickly.

Most consumers won’t notice a change at the checkout. Companies will need to update their recipes, but even if all the costs of updating recipes were passed on to shoppers, we calculate that at most it would cost about 10 cents each week for the average household.

Nor will consumers notice much of a change at the dinner table. Most people don’t notice when some salt is removed from common foods. There are many ways companies can make foods taste just as salty without adding as much salt. For example, they can make salt crystals finer, or use potassium-enriched salt, which swaps some of the harmful sodium in salt for potassium. And because the change will be gradual, our tastebuds will adapt to less salty foods over time.



Australia’s salt limits are failing​

Australia has had voluntary salt limits since 2009, but they are badly designed, poorly implemented, and have reduced population salt intake by just 0.3%.

Because Australia’s limits are voluntary, many food companies have chosen not to participate in the scheme. Our analysis shows that 73% of eligible food products are not participating, and only 4% have reduced their salt content.


file-20230926-25-xx5ge4.png

Grattan Institute analysis of Coyle (2021) and ABS (2023)



Action could save lives​

Modelling from the University of Melbourne shows that fixing our failed salt limits could add 36,000 extra healthy years of life, across the population, over the next 20 years.

This would delay more than 300 deaths each year and reduce health-care spending by A$35 million annually, the equivalent of 6,000 hospital visits.


file-20230928-15-jx07r1.png

Grattan Institute/Melbourne University School of Population and Global Health



International experience shows the costs of implementing such salt limits would be very low and far outweighed by the benefits.



How to fix our failed salt limits​

To achieve these gains, the federal government should start by enforcing the limits we already have, by making compliance mandatory. Fifteen countries have mandatory salt limits, and 14 are planning to introduce them.

The number of foods covered by salt limits in Australia should more than double, to be as broad as those the UK set in 2014. Broader targets would include common foods for which Australia does not currently set targets, such as baked beans, butter, margarine and canned vegetables.

A loophole in the current scheme that lets companies leave out a fifth of their products should be closed. The federal government should design the policy, rather than doing it jointly with industry representatives.

Over the coming decades, Australia will need many new and improved policies to reduce diet-related disease. Reducing salt intake must be part of this agenda. For too long, Australia has let the food industry set the standard, with almost no progress against a major threat to our health.

Getting serious about salt would save lives, and it would more than pay for itself through reduced health-care costs and increased economic activity.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Peter Breadon, Program Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute, and Lachlan Fox, Associate, Grattan Institute.

 
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Each year, more than 2,500 Australians die from diseases linked to eating too much salt.

We shouldn’t be putting up with so much unnecessary illness, mainly from heart disease and strokes, and so many deaths.

As a new Grattan Institute report shows, there are practical steps the federal government can take to save lives, reduce health spending and help the economy.



We eat too much salt, with deadly consequences​

Eating too much salt is bad for your health. It raises blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.

About one in three Australians has high blood pressure, and eating too much salt is the biggest individual contributor.

Unfortunately, the average Australian eats far too much salt – almost double the recommended daily maximum of 5 grams, equivalent to a teaspoon.

Australian governments know excessive salt intake is a big problem. That’s why in 2021 they set a target to reduce salt intake by at least 30% by 2030.

It’s an ambitious and worthy goal. But we’re still eating too much salt and we don’t have the policies to change that.


file-20230926-21-zehbrc.png

Grattan Institute/AIHW





Most of the salt we eat is added to food during manufacturing​

Most of the salt Australians eat doesn’t come from the shaker on the table. About three-quarters of it is added to food during manufacturing.

This salt is hidden in everyday staples such as bread, cheese and processed meats. Common foods such as ready-to-eat pasta meals or a ham sandwich can have up to half our total recommended salt intake.


file-20230926-25-w4cu54.png

Grattan Institute/Woolworths



Salt limits are the best way to cut salt intake​

Reducing the amount of salt added to food during manufacturing is the most effective way to reduce intake.

Salt limits can help us do that. They work by setting limits on how much salt can be added to different kinds of food, such as bread or biscuits. To meet these limits, companies need to change the recipes of their products, reducing the amount of salt.


file-20231017-25-bh0m9p.jpg

Food manufacturers can reduce the salt content of their food. Shutterstock



Under salt limits, the United Kingdom reduced salt intake by 20% in about a decade. South Africa is making even faster gains. Salt limits are cheap and easy to implement, and can get results quickly.

Most consumers won’t notice a change at the checkout. Companies will need to update their recipes, but even if all the costs of updating recipes were passed on to shoppers, we calculate that at most it would cost about 10 cents each week for the average household.

Nor will consumers notice much of a change at the dinner table. Most people don’t notice when some salt is removed from common foods. There are many ways companies can make foods taste just as salty without adding as much salt. For example, they can make salt crystals finer, or use potassium-enriched salt, which swaps some of the harmful sodium in salt for potassium. And because the change will be gradual, our tastebuds will adapt to less salty foods over time.



Australia’s salt limits are failing​

Australia has had voluntary salt limits since 2009, but they are badly designed, poorly implemented, and have reduced population salt intake by just 0.3%.

Because Australia’s limits are voluntary, many food companies have chosen not to participate in the scheme. Our analysis shows that 73% of eligible food products are not participating, and only 4% have reduced their salt content.


file-20230926-25-xx5ge4.png

Grattan Institute analysis of Coyle (2021) and ABS (2023)



Action could save lives​

Modelling from the University of Melbourne shows that fixing our failed salt limits could add 36,000 extra healthy years of life, across the population, over the next 20 years.

This would delay more than 300 deaths each year and reduce health-care spending by A$35 million annually, the equivalent of 6,000 hospital visits.


file-20230928-15-jx07r1.png

Grattan Institute/Melbourne University School of Population and Global Health



International experience shows the costs of implementing such salt limits would be very low and far outweighed by the benefits.



How to fix our failed salt limits​

To achieve these gains, the federal government should start by enforcing the limits we already have, by making compliance mandatory. Fifteen countries have mandatory salt limits, and 14 are planning to introduce them.

The number of foods covered by salt limits in Australia should more than double, to be as broad as those the UK set in 2014. Broader targets would include common foods for which Australia does not currently set targets, such as baked beans, butter, margarine and canned vegetables.

A loophole in the current scheme that lets companies leave out a fifth of their products should be closed. The federal government should design the policy, rather than doing it jointly with industry representatives.

Over the coming decades, Australia will need many new and improved policies to reduce diet-related disease. Reducing salt intake must be part of this agenda. For too long, Australia has let the food industry set the standard, with almost no progress against a major threat to our health.

Getting serious about salt would save lives, and it would more than pay for itself through reduced health-care costs and increased economic activity.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by, Peter Breadon, Program Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute, Lachlan Fox, Associate, Grattan Institute

Salt 🧂 well what about sugar added to food as well may as well hit the roller-coaster 🤔hmmm and to say it's a government issue well that's food for thought 🤔
 
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Trouble with removing sugar from drinks especially. and adding artificial sweeteners, is that any artificial additives are bad for ones health. We need some salt in our diet, especially during hot and humid conditions as we sweat out any in our system. But then at least our body tells us we need a little salt, if we suffer from cramp while doing some stretching exercises.
 
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Each year, more than 2,500 Australians die from diseases linked to eating too much salt.

We shouldn’t be putting up with so much unnecessary illness, mainly from heart disease and strokes, and so many deaths.

As a new Grattan Institute report shows, there are practical steps the federal government can take to save lives, reduce health spending and help the economy.



We eat too much salt, with deadly consequences​

Eating too much salt is bad for your health. It raises blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.

About one in three Australians has high blood pressure, and eating too much salt is the biggest individual contributor.

Unfortunately, the average Australian eats far too much salt – almost double the recommended daily maximum of 5 grams, equivalent to a teaspoon.

Australian governments know excessive salt intake is a big problem. That’s why in 2021 they set a target to reduce salt intake by at least 30% by 2030.

It’s an ambitious and worthy goal. But we’re still eating too much salt and we don’t have the policies to change that.


file-20230926-21-zehbrc.png

Grattan Institute/AIHW





Most of the salt we eat is added to food during manufacturing​

Most of the salt Australians eat doesn’t come from the shaker on the table. About three-quarters of it is added to food during manufacturing.

This salt is hidden in everyday staples such as bread, cheese and processed meats. Common foods such as ready-to-eat pasta meals or a ham sandwich can have up to half our total recommended salt intake.


file-20230926-25-w4cu54.png

Grattan Institute/Woolworths



Salt limits are the best way to cut salt intake​

Reducing the amount of salt added to food during manufacturing is the most effective way to reduce intake.

Salt limits can help us do that. They work by setting limits on how much salt can be added to different kinds of food, such as bread or biscuits. To meet these limits, companies need to change the recipes of their products, reducing the amount of salt.


file-20231017-25-bh0m9p.jpg

Food manufacturers can reduce the salt content of their food. Shutterstock



Under salt limits, the United Kingdom reduced salt intake by 20% in about a decade. South Africa is making even faster gains. Salt limits are cheap and easy to implement, and can get results quickly.

Most consumers won’t notice a change at the checkout. Companies will need to update their recipes, but even if all the costs of updating recipes were passed on to shoppers, we calculate that at most it would cost about 10 cents each week for the average household.

Nor will consumers notice much of a change at the dinner table. Most people don’t notice when some salt is removed from common foods. There are many ways companies can make foods taste just as salty without adding as much salt. For example, they can make salt crystals finer, or use potassium-enriched salt, which swaps some of the harmful sodium in salt for potassium. And because the change will be gradual, our tastebuds will adapt to less salty foods over time.



Australia’s salt limits are failing​

Australia has had voluntary salt limits since 2009, but they are badly designed, poorly implemented, and have reduced population salt intake by just 0.3%.

Because Australia’s limits are voluntary, many food companies have chosen not to participate in the scheme. Our analysis shows that 73% of eligible food products are not participating, and only 4% have reduced their salt content.


file-20230926-25-xx5ge4.png

Grattan Institute analysis of Coyle (2021) and ABS (2023)



Action could save lives​

Modelling from the University of Melbourne shows that fixing our failed salt limits could add 36,000 extra healthy years of life, across the population, over the next 20 years.

This would delay more than 300 deaths each year and reduce health-care spending by A$35 million annually, the equivalent of 6,000 hospital visits.


file-20230928-15-jx07r1.png

Grattan Institute/Melbourne University School of Population and Global Health



International experience shows the costs of implementing such salt limits would be very low and far outweighed by the benefits.



How to fix our failed salt limits​

To achieve these gains, the federal government should start by enforcing the limits we already have, by making compliance mandatory. Fifteen countries have mandatory salt limits, and 14 are planning to introduce them.

The number of foods covered by salt limits in Australia should more than double, to be as broad as those the UK set in 2014. Broader targets would include common foods for which Australia does not currently set targets, such as baked beans, butter, margarine and canned vegetables.

A loophole in the current scheme that lets companies leave out a fifth of their products should be closed. The federal government should design the policy, rather than doing it jointly with industry representatives.

Over the coming decades, Australia will need many new and improved policies to reduce diet-related disease. Reducing salt intake must be part of this agenda. For too long, Australia has let the food industry set the standard, with almost no progress against a major threat to our health.

Getting serious about salt would save lives, and it would more than pay for itself through reduced health-care costs and increased economic activity.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by, Peter Breadon, Program Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute, Lachlan Fox, Associate, Grattan Institute

I no longer use salt, other than a sauce or mustard I only ground black pepper.
 
I suffer from low blood pressure, my Neurologist asked me if I liked salt? Is the Pope a Catholic
 
Depends on what type of salt you eat.... Himalayan pink salt and Celtic salt are OK
Sorry, that is a outright lie. Both salts are basically sodium chloride with trace amounts of other elements such as manganese, calcium and magnesium which give rise to the pink and grey colour respectively. You sir, are a victim of the bullshit social media misinformation purporting the unfounded "health benefits" of these grossly overpriced furphies. May as well use azo dyes or food colouring!

You can actually kill someone with a good dose of potassium chloride, as it interrupts the electrical signals to the heart muscles. A method sometimes used in execution by lethal injection.

End of toxicology lesson.
 
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Sorry, that is a outright lie. Both salts are basically sodium chloride with trace amounts of other elements such as manganese, calcium and magnesium which give rise to the pink and grey colour respectively. You sir, are a victim of the bullshit social media misinformation purporting the unfounded "health benefits" of these grossly overpriced furphies. May as well use azo dyes or food colouring!

You can actually kill someone with a good dose of potassium chloride, as it interrupts the electrical signals to the heart muscles. A method sometimes used in execution by lethal injection.

End o f toxicology lesson.
bless you Veggie...we certainly are on the same wave length. Why don't we just stop eating? The outcome is the same as listening to these dick heads. Salt, sugar, meat, etc, etc. I have a carer who's marriage is going down the shute because her doctor daughter demands she NOT eat meat while he husband wants it, daughter wins. I have trouble breathing because my eldest son insisted that mould and mildew won't hurt you. I rented his house for 16 years and this man was LtCol of the Army Medical Corp (ret). I get so sick of these people who only know things from BOOKS not physical life. How the hell did I live this long?
 
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Sorry, that is a outright lie. Both salts are basically sodium chloride with trace amounts of other elements such as manganese, calcium and magnesium which give rise to the pink and grey colour respectively. You sir, are a victim of the bullshit social media misinformation purporting the unfounded "health benefits" of these grossly overpriced furphies. May as well use azo dyes or food colouring!

You can actually kill someone with a good dose of potassium chloride, as it interrupts the electrical signals to the heart muscles. A method sometimes used in execution by lethal injection.

End of toxicology lesson.
To each his own....
 

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