Salt Intake Estimation from Urine Samples in South Asian Population: Scoping Review

Author:

Afroza Ummay1ORCID,Abrar Ahmad Khairul1,Nowar Abira1,Akhtar Jubaida1,Mamun Mohammad Abdullah Al1,Sobhan Sheikh Mohammad Mahbubus1,Cobb Laura2,Ide Nicole2ORCID,Choudhury Sohel Reza1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Research, National Heart Foundation Hospital and Research Institute, Dhaka 1216, Bangladesh

2. Resolve To Save Lives (RTSL), New York, NY 10004, USA

Abstract

The World Health Organization recommended reducing one’s salt intake below 5 g/day to prevent disability and death from cardiovascular and other chronic diseases. This review aimed to identify salt estimation at the population level in South Asian countries, namely Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. We searched electronic databases and government websites for the literature and reports published between January 2011 and October 2021 and also consulted key informants for unpublished reports. We included studies that assessed salt intake from urinary sodium excretion, either spot urine or a 24 h urine sample, on a minimum of 100 samples in South Asian countries. We included 12 studies meeting the criteria after screening 2043 studies, out of which five followed nationally representative methods. This review revealed that salt intake in South Asian countries ranges from 6.7–13.3 g/day. The reported lowest level of salt intake was in Bangladesh and India, and the highest one was in Nepal. The estimated salt intake reported in the nationally representative studies were ranging from 8 g/day (in India) to 12.1 g/day (in Afghanistan). Salt consumption in men (8.9–12.5 g/day) was reported higher than in women (7.1–12.5 g/day). Despite the global target of population salt intake reduction, people in South Asian countries consume a much higher amount of salt than the WHO-recommended level.

Funder

Resolve To Save Lives (RTSL), USA

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference33 articles.

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5. United Nations (2021, November 13). Political Declaration of the High-Level Meeting of the General Assembly on the Prevention and Control of Non-Communicable Diseases: Draft Resolution/Submitted by the President of the General Assembly. Available online: https://digitallibrary.un.org/record/710899/?ln=en.

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