Salt use behaviours of Ghanaians and South Africans: a comparative study of knowledge, attitudes and practices

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Date
2017Author
Menyanu, Elias
Ware, Lisa J.
Charlton, Karen E.
Russell, Joanna
Biritwum, Richard
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Show full item recordAbstract
Salt consumption is high in Africa and the continent also shares the greatest burden of
hypertension. This study examines salt-related knowledge, attitude and self-reported behaviours
(KAB) amongst adults from two African countries—Ghana and South Africa—which have distributed
different public health messages related to salt. KAB was assessed in the multinational longitudinal
World Health Organisation (WHO) study on global AGEing and adult health (WHO-SAGE) Wave 2
(2014–2015). Respondents were randomly selected across both countries—Ghana (n = 6746; mean age
58 years old; SD 17; 41% men; 31% hypertensive) and South Africa (n = 3776, mean age 54 years old;
SD 17; 32% men; 45% hypertensive). South Africans were more likely than Ghanaians to add salt to
food at the table (OR 4.80, CI 4.071–5.611, p < 0.001) but less likely to add salt to food during cooking
(OR 0.16, CI 0.130–0.197, p < 0.001). South Africans were also less likely to take action to control their
salt intake (OR 0.436, CI 0.379–0.488, p < 0.001). Considering the various salt reduction initiatives of
South Africa that have been largely absent in Ghana, this study supports additional efforts to raise
consumer awareness on discretionary salt use and behaviour change in both countries
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/25603http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu9090939
http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/9/9/939
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]