Factors Associated with a Low-sodium Diet: The Fourth Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Won Joon Lee, Hyeon Chang Kim, Sun Min Oh, Dong Phil Choi, Jaelim Cho, Il Suh
Author Information
  1. Won Joon Lee: Department of Preventive Medicine, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The low-sodium diet is a known preventive factor for hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Factors associated with low-sodium diets should be identified to reduce sodium intake effectively. This study was conducted to identify factors correlated with a low-sodium diet.
METHODS: This cross-sectional study analyzed data from a total of 14,539 Koreans aged 20 years or older, who participated in the Fourth (2007-2009) Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. A low-sodium diet was defined as having ≤2,000 mg/day based on 24-hour recalls. Multiple logistic regression models were used to assess sex, age, education, number of family members, household income, occupation, alcohol drinking, total energy intake, frequency of eating out, and hypertension management status for their associations with low-sodium diets.
RESULTS: Among all participants, only 13.9% (n=2,016) had low-sodium diets. In the multivariate analysis, 40-49 years of age, clerical work jobs, higher total energy intake, and frequent eating out were inversely associated with low-sodium diets. And female sex and living-alone were associated with low-sodium diets. Lower frequency of eating out was significantly associated with low-sodium diets, even after adjusting for total energy intake and other potential confounders. Adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence interval) for a low-sodium diet were 1.97 (1.49-2.61), 1.47 (1.13-1.91), 1.24 (0.96-1.61), and 1.00 (reference) in people who eat out <1 time/month, 1-3 times/month, 1-6 times/week, and ≥1 time/day, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that sex, age, number of family members, occupation, total energy intake, and lower frequency of eating out were associated with a low-sodium diet in Korean adults.

Keywords

References

  1. Lancet. 2001 Mar 17;357(9259):848-51 [PMID: 11265954]
  2. JAMA. 1997 Oct 22-29;278(16):1357-62 [PMID: 9343468]
  3. BMJ. 2007 Apr 28;334(7599):885-8 [PMID: 17449506]
  4. N Engl J Med. 2010 Feb 18;362(7):590-9 [PMID: 20089957]
  5. Arch Intern Med. 2002 Jul 22;162(14):1619-24 [PMID: 12123406]
  6. BMJ. 1996 May 18;312(7041):1249-53 [PMID: 8634612]
  7. Stroke. 2004 Jul;35(7):1543-7 [PMID: 15143292]
  8. Am J Epidemiol. 2001 May 15;153(10):996-1006 [PMID: 11384956]
  9. Lancet. 2011 Apr 23;377(9775):1438-47 [PMID: 21474174]
  10. Arch Intern Med. 2001 Mar 12;161(5):685-93 [PMID: 11231700]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0low-sodiumdietdietsintake1associatedtotalenergyeatingstudyKoreansexagefrequencyhypertensionFactorsyearsFourthNationalHealthNutritionExaminationSurveynumberfamilymembersoccupation61Low-sodiumOBJECTIVES:knownpreventivefactorcardiovasculardiseaseidentifiedreducesodiumeffectivelyconductedidentifyfactorscorrelatedMETHODS:cross-sectionalanalyzeddata14539Koreansaged20olderparticipated2007-2009defined≤2000mg/daybased24-hourrecallsMultiplelogisticregressionmodelsusedassesseducationhouseholdincomealcoholdrinkingmanagementstatusassociationsRESULTS:Amongparticipants139%n=2016multivariateanalysis40-49clericalworkjobshigherfrequentinverselyfemaleliving-aloneLowersignificantlyevenadjustingpotentialconfoundersAdjustedoddsratios95%confidenceinterval9749-24713-19124096-100referencepeopleeat<1time/month1-3times/month1-6times/week≥1time/dayrespectivelyCONCLUSIONS:suggestsloweradultsAssociatedDiet:FoodservicesPopulationsurveillanceRepublicKoreaSodium

Similar Articles

Cited By