Predicted National Productivity Implications of Calorie and Sodium Reductions in the American Diet

被引:23
作者
Dall, Timothy M. [1 ]
Fulgoni, Victor L., III [2 ]
Zhang, Yiduo [1 ]
Reimers, Kristin J. [3 ]
Packard, Patricia T. [3 ]
Astwood, James D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Lewin Grp, Falls Church, VA 22042 USA
[2] Nutr Impact LLC, Battle Creek, MI USA
[3] ConAgra Food Inc, Omaha, NE USA
关键词
Diet; Overweight/Obesity; Hypertension; Absenteeism; Presenteeism; Disability; Health Promotion; Public Health; Prevention Research; BODY-MASS INDEX; BLOOD-PRESSURE; HEALTH-RISKS; UNCONTROLLED HYPERTENSION; CARDIOVASCULAR MORTALITY; WEIGHT-REDUCTION; OBESITY; ASSOCIATION; DISEASE; LIPOPROTEINS;
D O I
10.4278/ajhp.081010-QUAN-227
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Purpose. To model the potential. long-term national productivity benefits from reduced daily intake of calories and sodium. Design. Simulation based an secondary data analysis; quantitative research. Measures include absenteeism, presenteeism, disability, and premature mortality under various hypothetical dietary changes. Setting. United States. Subjects. Two hundred twenty-five million adults. Measures. Findings come from a Nutrition Impact Model that combines information from national surveys, peer-reviewed studies, and government reports. Analysis. We compare current estimates of national productivity loss associated with overweight, obesity, and hypertension. to estimates for hypothetical scenarios in which national prevalence of these factors is lower. Using the simulation model, we illustrate how modest dietary change ran achieve lower national prevalence of excess weight, and hypertension. Results. We estimate that permanent 100-kcal reductions in daily intake among the overweight/obese would eliminate approximately 71.2 million cases of overweight/obesity. In the long term, this could increase national productivity by $45.7 billion annually. Long-term sodium reductions of 400 mg in those with uncontrolled hypertension would eliminate about 1.5 million cases, potentially increasing productivity by $2.5 billion annually. More aggressive diet changes of 500 kcal and 1100 mg of sodium. reductions yield, potential productivity benefits of $133.3 and $5.8 billion, respectively. Conclusions. The potential long-term benefit of reduced calories and sodium, combining; medical cost savings with productivity increases, ranges from $108.5 billion for moderate reductions to $255.6 billion for aggressive reductions. These findings help inform public health policy and the business case for improving diet. (Am J Health Promot 2009;23[6]:423-430.)
引用
收藏
页码:423 / 430
页数:8
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