Food policies need to imply specific prices and optimize access to fruits and vegetables, and reduce consumption of sugar sweetened beverages lowers CVD.

TOP INSIGHT
Increase fruit and vegetable consumption and reduce sugar sweetened beverages to lower cardiovascular disease mortality and disparities.
Subsidies
The researchers estimated that a national 10% subsidy for fruit and vegetables was likely to be the most beneficial, potentially resulting in 150,500 fewer CVD deaths by 2030.
A 30% fruit and vegetable subsidy targeting only SNAP (or food stamp) recipients was estimated to avert 35,100 CVD deaths; a mass media campaign to change dietary habits might avert 25,800 CVD deaths, and a 10% tax on sugar sweetened beverages might avert 31,000 deaths from CVD.
The targeted SNAP only subsidy would reduce disparities the most. An approach combining these policies, they calculated, could have an especially large impact, saving around 230,000 lives and also reducing the disparity between CVD in SNAP recipients and non-SNAP recipients.
The full study has been published in the PLOS Medicine.
Dr Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard, University of Liverpool, said: "The findings of this study have important implications for crafting specific price and incentive policy approaches to optimize access to fruits and vegetables and reduce consumption of sugar sweetened beverages."
Dr Piotr Bandosz, University of Liverpool and the Medical University of Gdansk, added: "Policies effectively increasing fruit and vegetable consumption or reducing sugar sweetened beverage consumption might powerfully reduce cardiovascular disease mortality and disparities. Furthermore, a combination of these policies could be even more powerful."
Source-Eurekalert
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