Let's not sugar-coat it
Massachusetts General Hospital
Cutting 20% of sugar from packaged foods and 40% from beverages could prevent 2.48 million cardiovascular disease events (such as strokes, heart attacks, cardiac arrests), 490,000 cardiovascular deaths, and 750,000 diabetes cases in the U.S. over the lifetime of the adult population, according to micro-simulation study published in Circulation.
A team of researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), the Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy at Tufts University, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (NYC DOH) created a model to simulate and quantify the health, economic, and equity impacts of a pragmatic sugar-reduction policy proposed by the U.S. National Salt and Sugar Reduction Initiative (NSSRI).
A partnership of more than 100
local, state and national health organizations convened by the NYC DOH, the
NSSRI released draft sugar-reduction targets for packaged foods and beverages
in 15 categories in 2018. This February, NSSRI finalized the policy with the
goal of industry voluntarily committing to gradually reformulate their sugary
products.
Implementing a national policy, however, will require government support to monitor companies as they work toward the targets and to publicly report on their progress. The researchers hope their model will build consensus on the need for a national-sugar reformulation policy in the US. "We hope that this study will help push the reformulation initiative forward in the next few years," says Siyi Shangguan, MD, MPH, lead author and attending physician at MGH.
"Reducing the sugar content of commercially prepared foods and beverages will have a larger impact on the health of Americans than other initiatives to cut sugar, such as imposing a sugar tax, labeling added sugar content, or banning sugary drinks in schools."
Ten years after the NSSRI policy goes into effect, the U.S. could expect to save $4.28 billion in total net healthcare costs, and $118.04 billion over the lifetime of the current adult population (ages 35 to 79), according to the model.
Adding the societal costs of lost productivity of Americans developing diseases from excessive sugar consumption, the total cost savings of the NSSRI policy rises to $160.88 billion over the adult population's lifetime.
These benefits are
likely to be an underestimation since the calculations were conservative. The
study also demonstrated that even partial industry compliance with the policy
could generate significant health and economic gains.
The researchers
found that the NSSRI policy became cost-effective at six years and cost-saving
at nine years. The policy could also reduce disparities, with the greatest
estimated health gains among Black and Hispanic adults, and Americans with
lower income and less education -- populations that consume the most sugar as a
historical consequence of inequitable systems.
Product reformulation efforts have been shown to be successful in reducing other harmful nutrients, such as trans fats and sodium. The U.S., however, lags other countries in implementing strong sugar-reduction policies, with countries such as the UK, Norway, and Singapore taking the lead on sugar-reformulation efforts.
The US may yet become a leader in protecting its people from the
dangers of excessive sugar consumption if the NSSRI's proposed sugar-reduction
targets are achieved. "The NSSRI policy is by far the most carefully
designed and comprehensive, yet achievable, sugar-reformulation initiative in
the world," says Shangguan.
Consuming sugary
foods and beverages is strongly linked to obesity and diseases such as type 2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of mortality in the U.S.
More than two in five American adults are obese, one in two have diabetes or
prediabetes, and nearly one in two have cardiovascular disease, with those from
lower-income groups being disproportionately burdened.
"Sugar is
one of the most obvious additives in the food supply to reduce to reasonable
amounts," says Dariush Mozaffarian, MD, DrPH, co-senior author and dean of
the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.
"Our findings suggest it's time to implement a national program with
voluntary sugar reduction targets, which can generate major improvements in
health, health disparities, and healthcare spending in less than a
decade."
Major funding for this study provided by the National Institutes of Health.