Two new studies suggest that modest reductions in sodium levels in everyday foods like bread and packaged meals could significantly lower rates of heart disease and stroke in France and the United Kingdom. These changes would occur without requiring people to alter their eating habits. The research highlights the potential for quiet public health improvements through policy and industry collaboration.
Researchers have modeled the health impacts of sodium reduction initiatives in France and the UK, published in the journal Hypertension by the American Heart Association. In France, a 2022 voluntary agreement between the government and bread producers aims to lower salt in breads, including the staple baguette, by 2025. Bread traditionally accounts for about 25% of daily salt intake, with average consumption at 8.1 grams per day in 2015.
If targets are met, daily salt intake could drop by 0.35 grams per person, leading to modest blood pressure reductions. This might prevent 1,186 annual deaths, a 0.18% decline, along with fewer hospitalizations for ischemic heart disease (1.04% drop) and strokes (1.05% for hemorrhagic, 0.88% for ischemic). Men would benefit most, with 0.87% of cases avoided compared to 0.63% for women. "This salt-reduction measure went completely unnoticed by the French population -- no one realized that bread contained less salt," said Clémence Grave, M.D., lead author and epidemiologist at the French National Public Health Agency. She emphasized that such invisible changes in food reformulation can yield significant public health gains without relying on individual behavior shifts.
In the UK, 2024 targets for 84 grocery categories and 24 out-of-home foods like burgers and pizzas could reduce average daily salt intake from 6.1 grams to 4.9 grams, a 17.5% decrease. Over 20 years, this might avert 103,000 cases of ischemic heart disease and 25,000 strokes, generating 243,000 quality-adjusted life years and saving £1 billion for the National Health Service. "If U.K. food companies had fully met the 2024 salt reduction targets, the resulting drop in salt intake across the population could have prevented tens of thousands of heart attacks and strokes," noted Lauren Bandy, D.Phil., lead author from the University of Oxford.
Both studies underscore the value of population-level strategies, as excessive sodium contributes to hypertension and related conditions like heart attack and kidney disease. The World Health Organization recommends under 2,000 milligrams of sodium daily, while the American Heart Association suggests no more than 2,300 milligrams, ideally 1,500 for those with high blood pressure. Experts like Daniel W. Jones, M.D., from the University of Mississippi, affirm that such national approaches yield major population benefits despite small individual changes.