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May 3

Three weeks to lower the sodium in your diet – Herald-Mail Media

High blood pressure affects one in 4 adults have high blood pressure, or hypertension, which is a major risk factor for stroke and heart disease. If you have high blood pressure, visit your health care provider regularly and take medication as prescribed. If your blood pressure returns to normal levels, this indicates that the medication is working so keep taking it.

Research shows that increased sodium consumption can increase blood pressure. Ninety percent of the sodium in our diets come from salt. On average, American adults consume twice the American Heart Associations recommended sodium intake of 1500 mg daily. Changing your dietary habits can help to reduce sodium consumption. The majority of the sodium consumed is from processed foods and not salt that is added in cooking or at the table. Learning to read food labels and recognize foods that are high in sodium is the first step. Six common foods, loaded with excess sodium, include breads and rolls; cold cuts and cured meats; pizza; poultry; soup and sandwiches. Follow these simple steps to lower your sodium intake in three weeks.

Week 1: Focus on grains, cold cuts and cured meats. Cured meats include bacon, sausage, ham and hot dogs. Use food labels to identify lower-sodium choices in these foods. When you start tracking your sodium consumption, with the help of food labels, you might be surprised how much sodium you are truly eating. Write down how much sodium you have reduced in your diet in just one week by reading food labels and making healthier choices.

Week 2: Focus on pizza and poultry. You do not have to give up pizza; just make a few changes in the toppings. Cut back on the cheese and meats, which have more sodium, and add more veggies such as onions, green peppers and mushrooms. When eating poultry, select fresh poultry instead of fried, canned or processed that has more sodium. Keep logging how much sodium you are reducing in your diet.

Week 3: Focus on soups and sandwiches. Canned soups are loaded with sodium. For example, one serving (1 cup) of chicken noodle soup can have as much as 940 mg of sodium. Each can of soup has two servings so double that amount if you eat the whole can in one sitting.

There are many lower sodium canned soups available so read the labels carefully. It is best to make your soup from scratch to reduce even more sodium.

When making sandwiches, use lower sodium meats, cheeses and condiments. You might be surprised how the sodium adds up from these foods. Add plenty of low-sodium vegetables such as lettuce, tomatoes, spinach and onions to your sandwich.

After a few weeks, your taste buds will adjust and you will start to enjoy the real flavor of food without the salt. In fact, you will wonder how you ever ate food that was so salt. Decreasing the sodium in your diet is a heart healthy step to lower your risk for heart disease and stroke.

Lisa McCoy is a family and consumer-sciences educator with University of Maryland Extension in Washington County.

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Three weeks to lower the sodium in your diet - Herald-Mail Media

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