@article{22614, author = {Yan L. and Sun J. and Li Z. and Ma J. and Feng X. and Niu W. and Labarthe D. and Zhang Y. and Elliott P. and Yao C. and Zhou B. and Zhang J. and Zhang J. and Li N. and Li X. and Shi J. and Zhang R. and Hao Z. and Yu Y. and Chu H. and Zhao Y. and Engelgau M. and Wu Y. and Pan J. and Neal Bruce and Macmahon S}, title = {The Effects of a Community-Based Sodium Reduction Program in Rural China - A Cluster-Randomized Trial}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Average sodium intake and stroke mortality in northern China are both among the highest in the world. An effective, low-cost strategy to reduce sodium intake in this population is urgently needed. OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine the effects of a community-based sodium reduction program on salt consumption in rural northern China. DESIGN: This study was a cluster-randomized trial done over 18 months in 120 townships (one village from each township) from five provinces. Sixty control villages were compared to 60 intervention villages that were given access to a reduced-sodium, added-potassium salt substitute in conjunction with a community-based health education program focusing on sodium reduction. The primary outcome was the difference in 24-hour urinary sodium excretion between randomized groups. RESULTS: Among 1,903 people with valid 24-hour urine collections, mean urinary sodium excretion in intervention compared with control villages was reduced by 5.5% (-14mmol/day, 95% confidence interval -26 to -1; p = 0.03), potassium excretion was increased by 16% (+7mmol/day, +4 to +10; p<0.001), and sodium to potassium ratio declined by 15% (-0.9, -1.2 to -0.5; p<0.001). Mean blood pressure differences were -1.1 mm Hg systolic (-3.3 to +1.1; p = 0.33) and -0.7 mm Hg diastolic (-2.2 to +0.8, p = 0.35) and the difference in the proportion with hypertension was -1.3% (-5.1 to 2.5, p = 0.56). CONCLUSION: There were clear differences in population sodium and potassium intake between villages that were most likely a consequence of increased use of salt substitute. The absence of effects on blood pressure reflects the moderate changes in sodium and potassium intake achieved. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT01259700.

}, year = {2016}, journal = {PLoS One}, volume = {11}, edition = {2016/12/10}, number = {12}, pages = {e0166620}, isbn = {1932-6203 (Electronic)
1932-6203 (Linking)}, note = {Li, Nicole
Yan, Lijing L
Niu, Wenyi
Yao, Chen
Feng, Xiangxian
Zhang, Jianxin
Shi, Jingpu
Zhang, Yuhong
Zhang, Ruijuan
Hao, Zhixin
Chu, Hongling
Zhang, Jing
Li, Xian
Pan, Jianhong
Li, Zhifang
Sun, Jixin
Zhou, Bo
Zhao, Yi
Yu, Yan
Engelgau, Michael
Labarthe, Darwin
Ma, Jixiang
MacMahon, Stephen
Elliott, Paul
Wu, Yangfeng
Neal, Bruce
United States
PLoS One. 2016 Dec 9;11(12):e0166620. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0166620. eCollection 2016.}, language = {eng}, }