加拿大过度食糖消费的经济负担:是否应扩大预防行动的范围?

Siyuan Liu, L. Munasinghe, K. Maximova, Jennifer P. Taylor, A. Ohinmaa, P. Veugelers
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引用次数: 4

摘要

过量的糖摄入是各种慢性疾病(CDs)的一个确定的危险因素。在治疗和管理慢性阻塞性肺病的卫生保健费用以及与生产力损失和过早死亡相关的费用方面,早期没有研究量化其经济负担。然而,这些信息对于公共卫生决策者在规划和确定干预措施的优先次序时至关重要。本研究旨在估计加拿大过量食用游离糖的经济负担。游离糖是指添加到食物中的所有单糖和双糖,以及蜂蜜、糖浆和果汁中天然存在的糖。根据2015年加拿大社区健康调查-营养报告中的游离糖消费量和16种主要cd的既定风险估计,我们计算了可避免的直接医疗保健成本和间接成本。如果加拿大人遵守游离糖建议(消费量低于总能量摄入(TEI)的10%),2019年估计可以避免25亿美元(95% CI: 1.5, 3.6)的直接医疗保健和间接成本。对于更严格的建议(摄入量低于TEI的5%),这是50亿美元(95% CI: 3.1, 6.9)。我们饮食中过量的游离糖造成了巨大的经济负担,比任何食品都要大,是含糖饮料(SSBs)的3到6倍。因此,为减少糖消费而采取的公共卫生干预措施应考虑超越对甜食征税的范围,以更广泛的产品为目标,以便更有效地减轻非糖甜食的公共卫生和经济负担。
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The economic burden of excessive sugar consumption in Canada: should the scope of preventive action be broadened?
Excessive sugar consumption is an established risk factor for various chronic diseases (CDs). No earlier study has quantified its economic burden in terms of health care costs for treatment and management of CDs, and costs associated with lost productivity and premature mortality. This information, however, is essential to public health decision-makers when planning and prioritizing interventions. The present study aimed to estimate the economic burden of excessive free sugar consumption in Canada. Free sugars refer to all monosaccharides and disaccharides added to foods plus sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, and fruit juice. Based on free sugar consumption reported in the 2015 Canadian Community Health Survey–Nutrition and established risk estimates for 16 main CDs, we calculated the avoidable direct health care costs and indirect costs. If Canadians were to comply with the free sugar recommendation (consumption below 10% of total energy intake (TEI)), an estimated $2.5 billion (95% CI: 1.5, 3.6) in direct health care and indirect costs could have been avoided in 2019. For the stricter recommendation (consumption below 5% of TEI), this was $5.0 billion (95% CI: 3.1, 6.9). Excessive free sugar in our diet has an enormous economic burden that is larger than that of any food group and 3 to 6 times that of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs). Public health interventions to reduce sugar consumption should therefore consider going beyond taxation of SSBs to target a broader set of products, in order to more effectively reduce the public health and economic burden of CDs.
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