- First, medical science is evolutionary. What we "know" today is subject to further investigation and revision as we learn more. It is a process of creative destruction. We need to be prepared to "move on" when the evidence demonstrates the error of our ways.
- Second, we can save time, expense, anguish -- and people's health -- if we are a bit more patient and humble about the confidence we place in the results of medical studies. All studies are not of the same quality. This was a high quality randomized controlled trial -- the "gold standard." A well-done randomized trial of health outcomes should be required before our officials begin the drumbeat -- and trigger billions of dollars of expenditures -- for a massive dietary change. To re-state an earlier post on this blog: this is why we should insist on true evidence-based public health decision-making. Evidence-based decisions follow a rigorous process defined by the world-renowned Cochrane Collaboration.
- Third, we should require the same kind of controlled trial of the health outcomes of advice to restrict dietary salt as we now have to restrict dietary fat. There are only ten observational studies of the health outcomes of reducing salt in a U.S.-like population. We need to ask the outcomes question: does eating less salt reduce heart attacks or extend life? We need a controlled trial of this question even though it may cost $100 million or more. As in the case of low-fat diet advocacy, the government is spending multi-fold that amount and compliant food manufacturers are investing huge amounts trying to reduce salt intakes when, in truth, we have no evidence that it will make a difference. In fact, the observational studies show that in populations with salt intakes like the U.S., there is no health benefit and may even be a risk in low-salt diets (see our website discussion).
It is hard to exaggerate the importance of this JAMA study. And it's impossible to ignore the validity of the Salt Institute's observation that pursuing a policy of universal sodium reduction without a randomized health outcomes study is sheer folly.
No comments:
Post a Comment