By Stephen Daniells

Omega-3s from seafood, fruits, nuts, vegetables, and whole grains are among the 10 dietary factors associated with an estimated 45% of all cardiometabolic deaths in the US, says a new study.

Data published in the March 7 issue of JAMA indicated that the highest number of cardiometabolic deaths were associated with too much sodium and processed meat, and not enough nuts and seeds, seafood omega-3 fats, vegetable, and fruit, compared with optimal consumption levels.

“Nationally, estimated cardiometabolic deaths related to insufficient healthier foods/nutrients remained at least as substantial as those related to excess unhealthful foods/ nutrients,” wrote the researchers, led by Renata Micha, RD, PhD, of the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Boston.

These results inform strategies for prevention to reduce the health and economic burdens of cardiometabolic diseases in the United States. For example, positive messaging to patients, the public, and industry can emphasize maximizing the good (rather than simply reducing the harmful) food choices and products.

There needs to be a greater effort to increase omega-3s.

Commenting independently on the study’s findings, Harry Rice, PhD, VP of scientific and regulatory affairs for Global Organization for EPA and DHA Omega-3s (GOED), told us:

Given that high quality research continues to be published reporting on the cardiac consequences of sub-optimal intakes of EPA/DHA omega-3s, coupled with the knowledge that omega-3 intake is insufficient, not only in the US, but in most of the world, it seems almost criminal that there isn’t a greater effort to increase omega-3 intake.

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While this is a global public health concern, it continues to frustrate me that every year, people die from low omega-3 intake while the Canadian and US governments continue to debate the merits of establishing dietary reference intakes (DRIs) based on chronic disease risk reduction.

Study details

“Among unhealthful foods/nutrients, the present findings suggest that sodium is a key target,” wrote the researchers.

The researchers estimated the link between 10 foods/nutrients and deaths from heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes using data from a couple of sources, including the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) 1999-2002 and 2009-2012, meta-analyses of prospective studies and clinical trials, and the National Center for Health Statistics.

Data indicated that there were 702,308 cardiometabolic deaths in the US in 2012. Of these, an estimated 45% were associated with sub-optimal intakes of the 10 dietary factors.

The unhealthful foods/nutrients were listed as sodium (optimal level below 2 grams per day); processed meats intake above (optimal intake was 0 g/d); sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB, optimal intake was 0 g/d); and red meats (optimal intake below 14.3 g/d). Sub-optimal intakes were defined as above these optimal levels.

On the other hand, healthful foods/nutrients were listed as nuts/seeds (at least 20.2 g/d); seafood omega-3 fats (at least 250 mg/d); vegetables (at least 400 g/d); fruits (at least 300 g/d); whole grains (at least 125 g/d); and PUFAs replacing carbohydrates or saturated fats (at least 11% energy/d). Sub-optimal intakes were defined as below these optimal levels.

“Among individual dietary components, the largest estimated mortality was associated with suboptimal sodium (9.5%) followed by nuts/seeds, processed meats, seafood omega-3 fats, vegetables, fruits, [sugar sweetened beverages], and whole grains (each between 5.9%-8.5%), and, last, polyunsaturated fats (2.3%) and unprocessed red meats (0.4%),” wrote the researchers.

“Among unhealthful foods/nutrients, the present findings suggest that sodium is a key target,” they wrote. “Population-wide salt reduction policies that include a strong government role to educate the public and engage industry to gradually reduce salt content in processed foods (for example, as implemented in the United Kingdom and Turkey) appear to be effective, equitable, and highly cost-effective or even cost-saving.

The decline in SSB-associated proportional mortality between 2002 and 2012 is promising. The current results suggest that continuing programs to reduce SSBs are important, especially among younger adults, blacks, Hispanics, and individuals in the United States with lower educational attainment.

“These results should help identify priorities, guide public health planning, and inform strategies to alter dietary habits and improve health,” the authors wrote.

Relevance to public health nutrition policy

Low consumption of seafood omega-3 fats was associated with almost 15% of deaths due to coronary heart disease (CHD).

In an accompanying editorial in JAMA, Noel Mueller, PhD, and Lawrence Appel, MD, from Johns Hopkins University stated:

The study by Micha et al is quite relevant to public health nutrition policy, a critically important issue both in the United States and around the world. As the authors suggest, policies that affect diet quality, not just quantity, are needed.

[T]he findings reported by Micha et al appear correct–a substantial proportion of CMD [cardiometabolic disease] deaths are associated with suboptimal diet, and improving diet quality could help prevent a large fraction of CMD deaths and reduce health disparities.

Source: http://preventdisease.com/news/17/030817_Diet-Responsible-45-Percent-Deaths-Heart-Disease-Diabetes.shtml

 

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1 COMMENT

  1. The real causes of death identified in the study are cardiovascular disease, stroke and diabetes – all chronic diseases. Claiming that a laundry list of foods and beverages uniquely caused these deaths is a giant leap and an unsupported conclusion. Because it is an epidemiological study, causation does not exist.

    With that said, beverage companies are committed to being part of real solutions to public health challenges with initiatives like Balance Calories. This effort aims to reduce sugar and calories consumed from beverages by offering more low- and no-calorie choices and smaller sizes and then finding ways to get people to try them. We also have voluntarily placed clear calorie labels on the front of every bottle, can and pack we produce.

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