Reducing salt in your food can cut cancer risk
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WCRF, a UK charity that gives advice on how cancer can be prevented through diet, physical activity and weight, said that people should take less salt and the content of food should be labelled more clearly.
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The recommended daily limit is 6 g, about a level teaspoonful, but the World Cancer Research Fund said people were eating 8.6 g a day.
Some food labels list the sodium content instead of the amount of salt sodium is a component of salt.
To work out how much salt a food contains, multiply the sodium content by 2.5.
"Stomach cancer is difficult to treat successfully because most cases are not caught until the disease is well established," Kate Mendoza, head of health information at WCRF, was quoted by the BBC News as saying.
"This places even greater emphasis on making lifestyle choices to prevent the disease occurring in the first place such as cutting down on salt intake and eating more fruit and vegetables." Mendoza said.
The WCRF has called for a "traffic-light" system for food labeling red for high, amber for medium and green for low.
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