| Literature DB >> 35379921 |
Renata Micha1, Thomas Gaziano2,3, Shafika Abrahams-Gessel4, Parke Wilde1, Fang Fang Zhang1, Lauren Lizewski5, Stephen Sy4, Junxiu Liu1, Mengyuan Ruan6, Yujin Lee7, Dariush Mozaffarian1.
Abstract
Poor diet increases cardiometabolic disease risk, yet the impact of food service guidelines on employee health and its cost effectiveness is poorly understood. Federal food service guidelines (FFSG) aim to provide United States (U.S.) government employees with healthier food options. Using microsimulation modeling, we estimated changes in the incidence of cardiometabolic disease, related mortality, and the cost effectiveness of implementing FFSG in nationally representative model populations of government and private company employees across 5 years and lifetime. We based estimates on changes in workplace intake of six FFSG dietary targets and showed lifetime reductions of heart attacks (- 107/million), strokes (- 30/million), diabetes (- 134/million), ischemic heart disease deaths (- 56/million), and stroke deaths (- 8/million). FFSG is cost saving overall, with total savings in discounted healthcare costs from $4,611,026 (5 years) to $539,809,707 (lifetime) $U.S. This study demonstrates that FFSG improves health outcomes and is cost saving.Entities:
Keywords: Diet; Government; Health policy; Workplace
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35379921 PMCID: PMC9197963 DOI: 10.1057/s41271-022-00344-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Policy ISSN: 0197-5897 Impact factor: 3.526