Slashing salt can save lives – and it won’t hurt your hip pocket or tastebuds
- Written by The Conversation
Each year, more than 2,500 Australians die from diseases linked to eating too much salt.
We shouldn’t be putting up with so much unnecessary illness, mainly from heart disease and strokes, and so many deaths.
As a new Grattan Institute report shows, there are practical steps the federal government can take to save lives, reduce health spending and help the economy.
Read more: Essays on health: how food companies can sneak bias into scientific research
We eat too much salt, with deadly consequences
Eating too much salt is bad for your health. It raises blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart disease and stroke.
About one in three Australians has high blood pressure, and eating too much salt is the biggest individual contributor.
Unfortunately, the average Australian eats far too much salt – almost double the recommended daily maximum of 5 grams, equivalent to a teaspoon.
Read more: Health Check: how much salt is OK to eat?
Australian governments know excessive salt intake is a big problem. That’s why in 2021 they set a target to reduce salt intake by at least 30% by 2030.
It’s an ambitious and worthy goal. But we’re still eating too much salt and we don’t have the policies to change that.







