Britain’s saltiest foods, according to the British Heart FoundationĬereals: already known to contain large amounts of sugar, many have a lot of salt in them too.Ĭold meats: while some taste salty, such as smoked or cured meats, others such as turkey or chicken slices contains what the BHF calls “lots of sneaky salt”.Ĭheese and butter: well known for often being high in saturated fat, but many have worryingly high levels of salt too. “We will set out further action on levelling up the nation’s health and tackling disparities through a white paper later this year,” the spokesperson added. The Department of Health and Social Care said that new targets were set in 2020 to reduce the salt content of commonly eaten foods by 2024 and that “we continue to work in partnership with the food industry to achieve these”. “If our ministers are serious about reducing health inequalities, they must now introduce mandatory policy measures for the food industry to reduce the salt that they add to the food we buy, like other countries do successfully,” she said. Yet for too long the UK government has allowed the food industry to be in charge of public health at our expense. “Reducing salt is the most cost-effective measure to lower blood pressure and reduce the number of people dying and suffering from strokes and heart disease unnecessarily. Sonia Pombo, campaign manager at Action on Salt, backed the BHF’s call. However, it was one of many proposals in the document intended to make British food healthier and more sustainable that ministers decided not to include in the recent white paper on food, which led to claims that they were abandoning potentially effective action against obesity in order to please the food industry. Last year’s national food strategy, which the government commissioned from the chef and Leon restaurant chain co-founder Henry Dimbleby, recommended a salt levy. The sugar tax, which was introduced in 2018, has led to many sugary drinks containing a lot less sugar and is credited with households consuming on average 30g less of it a week than before the levy came in. In addition it could lead to 1.4 million fewer people living with high blood pressure, and result in 49,000 fewer strokes and 1,235,000 fewer cases of heart disease by 2035, according to a new analysis by Health Lumen for the BHF. We simply must be braver and act now if we’re to overcome this deadly problem,” said Dr Charmaine Griffiths, the BHF’s chief executive.Ī new salt tax would help the government achieve its ambition of people having an extra five years of healthy life by 2035, she added. “Progress in reducing salt in the food we eat has stalled in recent years, and so the government must take lessons from the success of the soft drinks industry levy. Public Health England has estimated that 85% of the salt people ingest is already in food at the point of purchase and consumers only add the other 15% during cooking or at the table.
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