Department of Community Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Miyazaki Prefectural Miyazaki Hospital, Miyazaki, Japan.
Division of Community and Family Medicine, Center for Community Medicine, Jichi Medical University, Shimotsuke, Tochigi, Japan.
Int J Gen Med. 2014 Apr 15;7:205-10. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S60997. eCollection 2014.
A salt preference questionnaire may be a convenient and cost-effective method for predicting salt intake; however, the influence of salt preference on daily salt intake is unclear. This study aimed at revealing the effectiveness of the salt preference question in determining the daily salt intake in primary care outpatients.
This cross-sectional study included 1,075 outpatients (men, n=436, 40.6%) at six primary care institutions in Japan. Primary outcomes included a salty food preference assessed by using one question and a daily salt intake, assessed using early morning second urine samples. Multivariate analyses determined the relationships between the salt intake and the two salt preference levels.
The mean age was 67.6±14.6 years, and 594 (55.3%) preferred salty foods. The daily salt intake was 12.3±4.0 g per day and 11.4±3.7 g per day in the salt preference and nonsalt preference groups, respectively (P<0.001). A salt intake <10 g per day was consumed by 169 (28.5%) and 181 (37.6%) patients (P=0.001), respectively, and <6 g salt per day was consumed by 28 (4.7%) and 26 (5.4%) patients (P=0.606), respectively. The patients who preferred salty foods consumed a significantly larger amount of salt per day than those who did not prefer salty foods (β coefficient, 0.621; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.146-1.095). There was no difference in the number of patients who consumed <10 g salt per day (adjusted odds ratio [ad-OR], 1.29; 95% CI, 0.99-1.69) or <6 g salt per day (ad-OR, 1.39; 0.90-1.69) between the groups.
Preference for salty foods was positively associated with daily salt intake. However, daily salt intake was not always appropriate, even in the patients who did not prefer salty foods. Behavioral interventions for salt restriction after an assessment of daily salt intake are necessary for primary care patients, regardless of their preference for salty foods.
盐偏好问卷可能是一种方便且具有成本效益的预测盐摄入量的方法;然而,盐偏好对日常盐摄入量的影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在揭示盐偏好问题在确定初级保健门诊患者日常盐摄入量方面的有效性。
这项横断面研究包括日本六家初级保健机构的 1075 名门诊患者(男性,n=436,40.6%)。主要结局包括使用一个问题评估的对咸食的偏好以及使用清晨第二次尿样评估的每日盐摄入量。多变量分析确定了盐摄入量与两种盐偏好水平之间的关系。
平均年龄为 67.6±14.6 岁,594 人(55.3%)喜欢咸食。盐偏好组和非盐偏好组的每日盐摄入量分别为 12.3±4.0 g/d 和 11.4±3.7 g/d(P<0.001)。分别有 169 名(28.5%)和 181 名(37.6%)患者(P=0.001)的盐摄入量<10 g/d,分别有 28 名(4.7%)和 26 名(5.4%)患者(P=0.606)的盐摄入量<6 g/d。喜欢咸食的患者的盐摄入量明显大于不喜欢咸食的患者(β系数,0.621;95%置信区间 [CI],0.146-1.095)。两组之间<10 g/d 盐摄入量的患者数量(调整后的优势比 [ad-OR],1.29;95%CI,0.99-1.69)或<6 g/d 盐摄入量的患者数量(ad-OR,1.39;95%CI,0.90-1.69)均无差异。
对咸食的偏好与每日盐摄入量呈正相关。然而,即使在不喜欢咸食的患者中,盐摄入量也并不总是合适的。无论患者是否喜欢咸食,在评估每日盐摄入量后,都需要对盐摄入量进行行为干预。