AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to estimate the impact of lowering saturated fats, trans-fats, salt, and added sugars in Brazil's diet on cardiovascular disease (CVD) deaths by 2030.
  • The research utilized data from the 2008/2009 Brazilian Household Budget Survey and modeled different scenarios for nutrient reductions, predicting varying degrees of mortality reduction in CVD.
  • The findings suggest that significant dietary changes could lead to a substantial decrease in CVD deaths, emphasizing the need for regulatory policies to reduce ultra-processed food consumption and promote healthier food options.

Article Abstract

Objective: To estimate the impact of reducing saturated fat, trans-fat, salt and added sugar from processed culinary ingredients and ultra-processed foods in the Brazilian diet on preventing cardiovascular deaths by 2030.

Design: A modelling study.

Setting: Data were obtained from the Brazilian Household Budget Survey 2008/2009. All food items purchased were categorized into food groups according to the NOVA classification. We estimated the energy and nutrient profile of foods then used the IMPACT Food Policy model to estimate the reduction in deaths from CVD up to 2030 in three scenarios. In Scenario A, we assumed that the intakes of saturated fat, trans-fat, salt and added sugar from ultra-processed foods and processed culinary ingredients were reduced by a quarter. In Scenario B, we assumed a reduction of 50 % of the same nutrients in ultra-processed foods and processed culinary ingredients. In Scenario C, we reduced the same nutrients in ultra-processed foods by 75 % and in processed culinary ingredients by 50 %.

Results: Approximately 390 400 CVD deaths might be expected in 2030 if current mortality patterns persist. Under Scenarios A, B and C, CVD mortality can be reduced by 5·5, 11·0 and 29·0 %, respectively. The main impact is on stroke with a reduction of approximately 6·0, 12·6 and 32·0 %, respectively.

Conclusions: Substantial potential exists for reducing the CVD burden through overall improvements of the Brazilian diet. This might require reducing the penetration of ultra-processed foods by means of regulatory policies, as well as improving the access to and promotion of fresh and minimally processed foods.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10260804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1368980017002063DOI Listing

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