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  • Open Access Icon
  • Discussion
  • Cite Count Icon 3
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00227-5
Mandatory salt targets: a key policy tool for global salt reduction efforts
  • Nov 1, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Monique Tan

  • Open Access Icon
  • Discussion
  • Cite Count Icon 6
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00240-8
Implementation efforts to support transition to HPV-based cervical cancer screening
  • Nov 1, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Maribel Almonte + 2 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Discussion
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00229-9
Contemporary heart failure and comorbidity risk management
  • Nov 1, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Meng Li + 1 more

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 5
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00214-7
50 years of comprehensive state-wide data on pregnancy termination in South Australia: a retrospective, population-based, cohort study
  • Nov 1, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Laura J Slade + 3 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00219-6
Estimated health effect, cost, and cost-effectiveness of mandating sodium benchmarks in Australia's packaged foods: a modelling study
  • Nov 1, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Matti Marklund + 8 more

Excess dietary sodium is a leading cause of death and disability globally. Because packaged foods are a major source of sodium in many countries, including Australia, mandatory limits for sodium might improve population health. We aimed to estimate the long-term health and economic effect of mandating such thresholds in Australia. We used a multiple cohort, proportional, multistate, life table model to simulate the effect of mandating either the WHO global sodium benchmarks or the currently non-mandatory Australian Healthy Food Partnership (HFP) sodium targets. We compared maintaining the current sodium intake status quo with intervention scenarios, using nationally representative data on dietary intake, sodium in packaged foods, and food sales volume. Blood pressure and disease burden data were obtained from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study. The effect of sodium reduction on blood pressure and disease risk was modelled on the basis of meta-analyses of randomised trials and cohort studies. Intervention and health-care costs were used to calculate the incremental cost per health-adjusted life-year (HALY) gained. Costs and HALYs were discounted annually at 3%. Compared with the status quo intervention, mandating the WHO benchmarks could be cost saving over the first 10 years (AUD$223 [95% uncertainty interval 82-433] million saved), with 2743 (1677-3976) cardiovascular disease deaths and 43 971 (26 892-63 748) incident cardiovascular disease events averted, and 11 174 (6800-16 205) HALYs gained. Over the population's lifetime, the intervention was cost effective (100·0% probability). Mandating the HFP sodium targets was also estimated to be cost effective (100·0% probability), but with 29% of the health benefits compared with the WHO benchmarks. Our modelling study supports mandating sodium thresholds for packaged foods as a cost-effective strategy to prevent death and disease in Australia. Although making Australia's voluntary reformulation targets mandatory might save thousands of lives, mandating the WHO global benchmarks could yield substantially greater health gains. None.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 32
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00211-1
Trends and inequalities in thinness and obesity among Chinese children and adolescents: evidence from seven national school surveys between 1985 and 2019
  • Oct 29, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Xinli Song + 22 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Front Matter
  • Cite Count Icon 2
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00248-2
Time for a public health response to gambling
  • Oct 24, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • The Lancet Public Health

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 127
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00167-1
The Lancet Public Health Commission on gambling
  • Oct 24, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Heather Wardle + 21 more

No abstract available.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 32
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00192-0
Mass incarceration as a driver of the tuberculosis epidemic in Latin America and projected effects of policy alternatives: a mathematical modelling study
  • Oct 15, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Yiran E Liu + 14 more

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 10
  • 10.1016/s2468-2667(24)00154-3
Area-level socioeconomic inequalities in mortality in China: a nationwide cohort study based on the ChinaHEART project
  • Oct 15, 2024
  • The Lancet Public Health
  • Wenyao Peng + 14 more