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Compliance to a low-salt diet. | LitMetric

Compliance to a low-salt diet.

Am J Clin Nutr

Department of Medicine, Franz Volhard Clinic, Rudolf Virchow University Hospital, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Free University of Berlin, Germany.

Published: February 1997

AI Article Synopsis

  • Community intervention projects have shown that reducing dietary salt intake is challenging and requires sustained effort; slight decreases were mostly seen in normotensive women.
  • A single center's demonstration project successfully achieved a 50% long-term salt reduction in hypertensive patients through innovative adherence tools and supportive partners.
  • Multicenter trials confirm long-term salt reduction is possible, though participants were often carefully selected individuals, highlighting the need for structured health care team involvement and continuous education to maintain behavioral change.

Article Abstract

Community intervention projects, efforts at single centers, and multicenter, prospective, dietary salt-restriction trials suggest that such an intervention is neither easy to achieve nor simple to maintain. Community-wide interventions based on advertisements, pamphlets, posters, radio messages, instructions in schools or other institutions, and cooperation from food suppliers such as butchers and bakers resulted in a slight decrease in salt consumption, mostly in normotensive women. A demonstration project at a single center showed that lowering salt intake long-term by 50% in hypertensive patients was feasible. That study included self-administered, positive-feedback devices to indicate adherence and a role for a household partner in achieving compliance. Multicenter intervention trials also indicate that reducing salt intake in the long term is feasible. However, in all intervention trials the subjects were highly selected, stable, generally married male volunteers. An elaborate training program involving many health care professionals was necessary and recidivism was common. Successful intervention requires specific goals and delegated responsibilities on the part of the health care team, careful assessment of the patient and the risk factors, as well as motivation for behavioral change, a specific plan for implementation, repetitive educational efforts, and a built-in monitoring mechanism.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/65.2.698SDOI Listing

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