4.6 Article

An Economic Evaluation of Salt Reduction Policies to Reduce Coronary Heart Disease in England: A Policy Modeling Study

Journal

VALUE IN HEALTH
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 517-524

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jval.2014.03.1722

Keywords

cardiovascular disease; economic evaluation; population health; salt; UK policy

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council NPRI3 programme [G0900847/1]
  2. MRC [G0900847] Funding Source: UKRI
  3. Medical Research Council [G0900847] Funding Source: researchfish

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Objectives: Dietary salt intake has been causally linked to high blood pressure and increased risk of cardiovascular events. Cardiovascular disease causes approximately 35% of total UK deaths, at an estimated annual cost of 30 billion. The World Health Organization and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence have recommended a reduction in the intake of salt in people's diets. This study evaluated the cost-effectiveness of four population health policies to reduce dietary salt intake on an English population to prevent coronary heart disease (CHD). Methods: The validated IMPACT CHD model was used to quantify and compare four policies: 1) Change4Life health promotion campaign, 2) front-of-pack traffic light labeling to display salt content, 3) Food Standards Agency working with the food industry to reduce salt (voluntary), and 4) mandatory reformulation to reduce salt in processed foods. The effectiveness of these policies in reducing salt intake, and hence blood pressure, was determined by systematic literature review. The model calculated the reduction in mortality associated with each policy, quantified as life-years gained over 10 years. Policy costs were calculated using evidence from published sources. Health care costs for specific CHD patient groups were estimated. Costs were compared against a do nothing baseline. Results: All policies resulted in a life-year gain over the baseline. Change4life and labeling each gained approximately 1960 life-years, voluntary reformulation 14,560 life-years, and mandatory reformulation 19,320 life-years. Each policy appeared cost saving, with mandatory reformulation offering the largest cost saving, more than 660 million. Conclusions: All policies to reduce dietary salt intake could gain life years and reduce health care expenditure on coronary heart disease.

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