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. 2013 Feb 11;16(12):2124–2131. doi: 10.1017/S1368980013000153

Table 3.

Potential health effect if the diet of the entire Danish population complied with the national nutritional recommendations. Effect illustrated as absolute (DALY per 100 000 people) and relative (PAF) change in DALY compared with baseline for each association between nutritional exposures and health outcomes and summed for each nutritional exposure

Nutritional exposure
Baseline DALY for Fruit and vegetables Fibre Fat Saturated fat
Health outcome health outcome PAF (%) DALY PAF (%) DALY PAF (%) DALY PAF (%) DALY
IHD 910 26·7 242·8 10·7 97·1
Ischaemic stroke 462* 16·3 75·3
Colorectal cancer 324 7·5 24·3
Lung cancer 502 9·8 49·0
Breast cancer 284 5·2 14·7 2·0 5·7 2·9 8·3
Total change in DALY for exposure
Sum 367·2 136·2 5·7 8·3
95% CI 124·0, 582·7 70·9, 205·2 1·2, 10·7 2·3, 14·4

DALY, disability-adjusted life years; PAF, population-attributable fraction.

– indicates that no or insufficient evidence was found for the given association.

*WHO's estimate of burden of disease from stroke covers both ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke. However, only ischaemic stroke was associated with intake of fruit and vegetables( 10 ). Assuming equal burden of disease from the two outcomes, burden of disease from ischaemic stroke was calculated as the relative share of ischaemic stroke in Denmark (80–85%)( 32 ).