Bread a culprit in Americans eating too much salt

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Bread basket is photographed in a shop in Warsaw February 7, 2012.   REUTERS/Peter Andrews

Bread basket is photographed in a shop in Warsaw February 7, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Peter Andrews

Tue Feb 7, 2012 6:00pm EST

(Reuters) - Nine out of 10 American adults consume too much salt and the leading culprit is not potato chips or popcorn but slices of bread and dinner rolls, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday.

Forty-four percent of salt consumed can be linked to 10 types of foods, CDC said. Bread and rolls lead the list followed by cold cuts and cured meat, pizza, poultry, soups, sandwiches, cheese, pasta dishes, meat dishes and snacks such as pretzels and potato chips.

Bread may not have much salt in a single serving, but when eaten several times a day can raise daily salt intake. A single slice of white bread could contain as many as 230 milligrams of salt, according to the CDC.

High salt intake can raise blood pressure, which can lead to heart disease and stroke, the CDC said.

The average American consumes 3,266 milligrams of salt daily, not counting salt added at the table, which is far above the recommended 2,300 milligrams, the CDC said.

For six out of 10 Americans, including those who are over age 51 or have high blood pressure or diabetes, 1,500 milligrams is the recommended daily salt limit.

Even foods that seem healthy such as cottage cheese may be high in salt, the agency reported. Even raw chicken and pork is often injected with salt.

The CDC recommended eating more fruits and vegetables and carefully reading the labels on food products to find those with the lowest salt content.

"Heart disease and stroke are leading causes of death in the United States and are largely dependent on the high rate of high blood pressure," CDC Director Dr. Thomas R. Frieden told reporters in a telephone news conference Tuesday.

One in three American adults has high blood pressure, he added.

"One of the things that is driving blood pressure up is that most adults in this country eat or drink about twice the amount of sodium as is recommended," Frieden said. "Most of that extra sodium comes from common grocery store and restaurant items and a very small proportion from the salt shaker at the table."

Nearly two-thirds of the salt consumed by Americans is found in store products, 24.8 percent from restaurants and the remainder from other sources such as vending machines and the home salt shaker, the study found.

Salt per calorie of food consumed was much higher at restaurants than from store-bought food, the CDC said.

Frieden recommended that food producers and restaurants voluntarily reduce the amount of salt in their food. A 25-percent drop in the salt content of the top 10 sodium sources would save 28,000 lives a year, he added. It would also give consumers more choice, he said.

"People can choose how much food to add at the table," he said. "They can't take it out once it's there."

The Grocery Manufacturer's Association said that the food industry has been trying to reduce the salt content of thousands of products while keeping it tasty for consumers.

"While progress is being made, reducing sodium in products without affecting the taste or consumer acceptance of products is no easy task," the industry group said in a statement emailed to Reuters.

The group said that challenges of reducing salt include finding substitutes for it that maintain the taste, and making sure that food safety standards are met because salt is a major preservative in many foods.

(Editing by Greg McCune)

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Comments (4)
foodandart wrote:
After having countless aches in my hands and realizing it was the beginning of osteo-arthritis, we stopped eating bread by and large and now only consume a loaf – between two adults in 10 days. It is also made at a nearby bakery and is fresh so requires less salt than industrial product which may sit on shelves for weeks.

After a year of limiting breads, bready things like muffins, biscuits, pastries and pastas – the report from the sore hands is that they are completely painless. Also I’ve notices that the joints do not get swollen.

Yes, limiting breads and all the grain-based foods and changing them out for fresh veggies and small amounts of meats and dairy has done wonders for my health and waist!

Sensible eating works wonders. Granted it is nor what corporate McFood wants, but there’s only so much we can pay for insurance before it becomes unsustainable and tanks the economy.

We should think about that because right now, *chronic*, DIET-RELATED disease is 75% of the total of ALL medical COST.

That’s THREE-QUARTERS of your monthly insurance premium paying for bad diet choices of those in your soon-to-be expanding, MANDATORY, medical insurance pool.

Feb 07, 2012 3:36pm EST  --  Report as abuse
Koa wrote:
This is very misleading. The article says 66% (or two-thirds) of Americans’ salt intake comes from “grocery store” items, not bread specifically. Two-thirds of the average sodium is around 2200 mg’s, and most from bread? That would be 10 slices of bread, no one eats that! Lies, lies, lies. It’s frozen food and processed foods combined that lead to the big overage on sodium. Also very misleading about heart disease and stroke, added sodium puts stress on the kidneys and renal disease is also a BIG killer. Thank the CDC for all it’s diligence…

Feb 07, 2012 4:18pm EST  --  Report as abuse
dbradshaw wrote:
Some people don’t like bread, while others, like myself, like it and eat a lot. To reduce my salt, I bake bread without salt in a bread machine. By using Mrs Dash instead of salt I can’t tell any difference in the bread. My point is that bread doesn’t need salt to taste good.

Feb 07, 2012 7:27pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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