Report: FDA Should Force Rollback In Salty Foods
Report: FDA Should Force Rollback In Salty Foods
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) â The Food and Drug Administration says it will consider a new call to force food makers to gradually cut the salt hidden inside their products â but donât expect less salty soups, pizzas or pastas any time soon.
Americans eat about 1½ teaspoons of salt daily, more than double what they need for good health and high enough to increase risk of high blood pressure, strokes, and other problems. Most of that sodium doesnât come from the table salt-shaker â itâs hidden inside common processed foods and restaurant meals.
Major foods makers have started reducing sodium in recent years, but have argued that they donât have tasty ways to replace sodium for deep cuts â and they fear consumer backlash as the taste changes.
On April 20, the prestigious Institute of Medicine said the food industry hasnât done enough to voluntarily cut back. Echoing earlier calls from the American Medical Association and other health groups, the IOM urged the government to set maximum sodium levels for different foods in a stepped rollback â so that eventually, the average consumption would drop by about half a teaspoon.
A gradual reduction would let people adjust to the change in flavor.
âWe donât believe this is a fast project by any means,â said Dr Jane E. Henney of the University of Cincinnati, a former FDA commissioner who headed the IOMâs study. âWe think itâs important and imperative to get started, but we think this will probably take years to accomplish.â
The FDA hasnât decided whether to regulate sodium levels, but âno options are off the table,â said spokeswoman Meghan Scott.
âA lot would have to be done before any decision is made to regulate sodium levels,â Ms Scott said. But, âthere is very little debate any longer over the impact sodium has.â
The IOM is an independent agency chartered by Congress to advise the federal government, and is just the latest in a string of health groups to pressure the FDA in recent years to cut the salt.
The American Medical Association has said that if the salt in processed and restaurant food were cut in half over ten years, that ultimately 150,000 lives a year could be saved.
One in three US adults has high blood pressure, in turn a leading cause of heart attacks, strokes, and kidney failure. And while being overweight and inactive raises blood pressure, too much salt is a big culprit as well.
Government guidelines set 2,300 milligrams of sodium as the maximum daily intake â the amount above which health problems can appear. But the IOM says people need just 1,500 mg a day, even less if theyâre over 50. Yet average consumption is more than 3,400 mg.