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Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up

BACKGROUND: To reduce excess dietary sodium consumption, Nigeria’s 2019 National Multi-sectoral Action Plan (NMSAP) for the Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases includes policies based on the World Health Organization SHAKE package. Priority actions and strategies include mandatory so...

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Autores principales: Sanuade, Olutobi A., Alfa, Vanessa, Yin, Xuejun, Liu, Hueiming, Ojo, Adedayo E., Shedul, Gabriel L., Ojji, Dike B., Huffman, Mark D., Orji, Ikechukwu A., Okoli, Rosemary C. B., Akor, Blessing, Ripiye, Nanna R., Eze, Helen, Okoro, Clementina Ebere, Van Horn, Linda, Tripathi, Priya, Ojo, Tunde M., Trieu, Kathy, Neal, Bruce, Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9838847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36638099
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280226
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author Sanuade, Olutobi A.
Alfa, Vanessa
Yin, Xuejun
Liu, Hueiming
Ojo, Adedayo E.
Shedul, Gabriel L.
Ojji, Dike B.
Huffman, Mark D.
Orji, Ikechukwu A.
Okoli, Rosemary C. B.
Akor, Blessing
Ripiye, Nanna R.
Eze, Helen
Okoro, Clementina Ebere
Van Horn, Linda
Tripathi, Priya
Ojo, Tunde M.
Trieu, Kathy
Neal, Bruce
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
author_facet Sanuade, Olutobi A.
Alfa, Vanessa
Yin, Xuejun
Liu, Hueiming
Ojo, Adedayo E.
Shedul, Gabriel L.
Ojji, Dike B.
Huffman, Mark D.
Orji, Ikechukwu A.
Okoli, Rosemary C. B.
Akor, Blessing
Ripiye, Nanna R.
Eze, Helen
Okoro, Clementina Ebere
Van Horn, Linda
Tripathi, Priya
Ojo, Tunde M.
Trieu, Kathy
Neal, Bruce
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
author_sort Sanuade, Olutobi A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To reduce excess dietary sodium consumption, Nigeria’s 2019 National Multi-sectoral Action Plan (NMSAP) for the Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases includes policies based on the World Health Organization SHAKE package. Priority actions and strategies include mandatory sodium limits in processed foods, advertising restrictions, mass-media campaigns, school-based interventions, and improved front-of-package labeling. We conducted a formative qualitative evaluation of stakeholders’ knowledge, and potential barriers as well as effective strategies to implement these NMSAP priority actions. METHODS: From January 2021 to February 2021, key informant interviews (n = 23) and focus group discussions (n = 5) were conducted with regulators, food producers, consumers, food retailers and restaurant managers, academia, and healthcare workers in Nigeria. Building on RE-AIM and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, we conducted directed content qualitative analysis to identify anticipated implementation outcomes, barriers, and facilitators to implementation of the NMSAP sodium reduction priority actions. RESULTS: Most stakeholders reported high appropriateness of the NMSAP because excess dietary sodium consumption is common in Nigeria and associated with high hypertension prevalence. Participants identified multiple barriers to adoption and acceptability of implementing the priority actions (e.g., poor population knowledge on the impact of excess salt intake on health, potential profit loss, resistance to change in taste) as well as facilitators to implementation (e.g., learning from favorable existing smoking reduction and advertising strategies). Key strategies to strengthen NMSAP implementation included consumer education, mandatory and improved front-of-package labeling, legislative initiatives to establish maximum sodium content limits in foods and ingredients, strengthening regulation and enforcement of food advertising restrictions, and integrating nutrition education into school curriculum. CONCLUSION: We found that implementation and scale-up of the Nigeria NMSAP priority actions are feasible and will require several implementation strategies ranging from community-focused education to strengthening current and planned regulation and enforcement, and improvement of front-of-package labeling quality, consistency, and use.
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spelling pubmed-98388472023-01-14 Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up Sanuade, Olutobi A. Alfa, Vanessa Yin, Xuejun Liu, Hueiming Ojo, Adedayo E. Shedul, Gabriel L. Ojji, Dike B. Huffman, Mark D. Orji, Ikechukwu A. Okoli, Rosemary C. B. Akor, Blessing Ripiye, Nanna R. Eze, Helen Okoro, Clementina Ebere Van Horn, Linda Tripathi, Priya Ojo, Tunde M. Trieu, Kathy Neal, Bruce Hirschhorn, Lisa R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: To reduce excess dietary sodium consumption, Nigeria’s 2019 National Multi-sectoral Action Plan (NMSAP) for the Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases includes policies based on the World Health Organization SHAKE package. Priority actions and strategies include mandatory sodium limits in processed foods, advertising restrictions, mass-media campaigns, school-based interventions, and improved front-of-package labeling. We conducted a formative qualitative evaluation of stakeholders’ knowledge, and potential barriers as well as effective strategies to implement these NMSAP priority actions. METHODS: From January 2021 to February 2021, key informant interviews (n = 23) and focus group discussions (n = 5) were conducted with regulators, food producers, consumers, food retailers and restaurant managers, academia, and healthcare workers in Nigeria. Building on RE-AIM and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, we conducted directed content qualitative analysis to identify anticipated implementation outcomes, barriers, and facilitators to implementation of the NMSAP sodium reduction priority actions. RESULTS: Most stakeholders reported high appropriateness of the NMSAP because excess dietary sodium consumption is common in Nigeria and associated with high hypertension prevalence. Participants identified multiple barriers to adoption and acceptability of implementing the priority actions (e.g., poor population knowledge on the impact of excess salt intake on health, potential profit loss, resistance to change in taste) as well as facilitators to implementation (e.g., learning from favorable existing smoking reduction and advertising strategies). Key strategies to strengthen NMSAP implementation included consumer education, mandatory and improved front-of-package labeling, legislative initiatives to establish maximum sodium content limits in foods and ingredients, strengthening regulation and enforcement of food advertising restrictions, and integrating nutrition education into school curriculum. CONCLUSION: We found that implementation and scale-up of the Nigeria NMSAP priority actions are feasible and will require several implementation strategies ranging from community-focused education to strengthening current and planned regulation and enforcement, and improvement of front-of-package labeling quality, consistency, and use. Public Library of Science 2023-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9838847/ /pubmed/36638099 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280226 Text en © 2023 Sanuade et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sanuade, Olutobi A.
Alfa, Vanessa
Yin, Xuejun
Liu, Hueiming
Ojo, Adedayo E.
Shedul, Gabriel L.
Ojji, Dike B.
Huffman, Mark D.
Orji, Ikechukwu A.
Okoli, Rosemary C. B.
Akor, Blessing
Ripiye, Nanna R.
Eze, Helen
Okoro, Clementina Ebere
Van Horn, Linda
Tripathi, Priya
Ojo, Tunde M.
Trieu, Kathy
Neal, Bruce
Hirschhorn, Lisa R.
Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title_full Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title_fullStr Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title_full_unstemmed Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title_short Stakeholder perspectives on Nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: Lessons for implementation and scale-up
title_sort stakeholder perspectives on nigeria’s national sodium reduction program: lessons for implementation and scale-up
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9838847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36638099
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0280226
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