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Study Design and Baseline Characteristics of a Combined Educational and Environmental Intervention Trial to Lower Sodium Intake in Swiss Employees

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Public Health
Date 2018 Apr 3
PMID 29606103
Citations 5
Authors
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Abstract

Background: Blood pressure is a primary cardiovascular disease risk factor. Population-wide governmental strategies aim to reduce lifestyle and dietary risk factors for hypertension, one of which is an unbalanced diet with high sodium and low potassium intakes. Nutrition interventions in the workplace are considered a promising approach in encouraging health-promoting behaviors. We developed and conducted the health promoting sodium reduction trial "Healthful & Tasty: Sure!" in worksites in the German-speaking part of Switzerland from May 2015 to Nov 2016, for which we present the study protocol and baseline characteristics.

Methods: Healthful & Tasty, a cluster nonrandomized single-arm trial with calibration arm, aimed to demonstrate the effectiveness of a combined educational and environmental intervention in the workplace in reducing employees' average daily sodium/salt intake by 15%. To this end, health and food literacy of employees and guideline compliance among the catering facility team needed to be improved. The primary outcome measure was sodium/salt intake estimated from sodium excretion in a 24-h urine sample. Secondary outcome measures included changes in the overall qualitative diet composition, blood pressure, anthropometric indices, and health and food literacy. Of eight organizations with catering facilities, seven organizations took part in the nutrition education and catering salt reduction interventions, and one organization participated as a control. Overall, 145 consenting employees were included in the staggered, one-year four-phase trial, of which 132 participated in the intervention group. In addition to catering surveys and food sampling, the trial included five follow-up health assessments including questionnaires, blood pressure measurements, anthropometrics, and sodium, potassium, and iodine intake measurements obtained from 24-h and spot urine samples, and a food record checklist. Exploratory and hypothesis generating baseline statistical analysis included 141 participants with adequate 24-h urine samples.

Discussion: Despite practice-driven limitations to the study design and small cluster and participant numbers, this trial has methodological strength and will provide important insights into the effectiveness of a combined educational and environmental intervention to reduce salt intake among female and male Swiss employees.

Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00006790 . Registered 23 September 2014.

Citing Articles

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Reduction of Excessive Dietary Sodium Consumption: Effectiveness of a Prevention Intervention among Health Workers in a Large Italian Hospital.

Spiteri G, Monaco M, Carta A, Torroni L, Taus F, Verlato G Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023; 20(8).

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Estimation of Sodium Availability and Food Sources from 2018 to 2019 and Its Trends during the 2004-2019 Period in Costa Rica.

Rosello-Araya M, Madriz-Morales K, Vega-Solano J, Blanco-Metzler A, Nunez-Rivas H, Benavides-Aguilar K Nutrients. 2022; 14(15).

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Validation of salt intake measurements: comparisons of a food record checklist and spot-urine collection to 24-h urine collection.

Beer-Borst S, Hayoz S, Grea Krause C, Strazzullo P Public Health Nutr. 2022; 25(11):2983-2994.

PMID: 35850716 PMC: 7613718. DOI: 10.1017/S1368980022001537.


RE-AIM evaluation of a one-year trial of a combined educational and environmental workplace intervention to lower salt intake in Switzerland.

Beer-Borst S, Hayoz S, Eisenblatter J, Jent S, Siegenthaler S, Strazzullo P Prev Med Rep. 2019; 16:100982.

PMID: 31516815 PMC: 6734049. DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2019.100982.

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