
#65: Can I Eat All the Salt That I Want?
Live Long and Well with Dr. Bobby
Why salt feels like a clear health message
Bobby Dubois outlines public health claims about salt and frames the scientific nuance and risk-benefit approach.
You read everywhere that you “should” cut salt—especially if your blood pressure is up. But salt also makes food enjoyable. In this episode, I walk through the human evidence (not animal studies) and frame salt as a risk–benefit tradeoff: when does sodium meaningfully matter, for whom, and how can you test your sensitivity?
Big questions we answer
- If you have high blood pressure: does lowering salt always help?
- If your BP is normal but you have heart/kidney risk: does salt matter?
- If you’re basically healthy: how worried should you be?
Key takeaways
- Sodium is essential (nerves, muscles, fluid balance)—the issue is dose and individual response.
- Most sodium comes from packaged/restaurant foods (not your salt shaker).
- Salt restriction lowers BP, but the average effect is modest compared with typical BP meds (context matters).
- Salt sensitivity varies: roughly ~30% of healthy people and ~40–50% of people with hypertension may be “salt-sensitive” (with higher rates in older adults, women, and some ancestry groups).
- If you’re salt-sensitive—especially with hypertension—being mindful of sodium is likely worth it. If you’re not, the “must be low-salt for everyone” story is less clear.
Practical: Do an N-of-1 salt sensitivity test
- Measure home BP daily (or a few times/day) for a week
- Go lower-sodium for 1–2+ weeks (at least within guidelines, possibly lower)
- Track BP change
- Add salt back and watch what happens
- Optional: repeat the low-salt phase for confirmation
If BP shifts meaningfully (often ~3–5 mmHg+), you may be salt-sensitive.
Food reality check (why sodium adds up fast)
- ~10% of a 2,300 mg/day sodium “budget”: 2 slices bread, 1 Tbsp ketchup, or a pinch of salt
- ~1/3: 1 cup canned soup, 1 slice pizza, or a Big Mac
- ~1/2: frozen lasagna, a few deli slices, or a 6” cold-cut sub
Cooking mostly from whole foods makes staying lower-sodium much easier.
Studies & resources mentioned (links embedded)
- CDC hypertension awareness/treatment/control stats: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db511.htm
- Hypertension outcomes review (risk of events/death): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8292050/
- Population sodium/BP overview (JACC): https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jacc.2019.11.055
- DASH-Sodium trial (NEJM): https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM200101043440101
- Sodium restriction meta-analysis (BP/outcomes): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12624901/
- Salt sensitivity overview (AHA/Hypertension): https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.17959
- Heart failure trials/meta (salt restriction): https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.122.009879
- Salt substitute trial (NEJM): https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2105675
Call to action
Are you going to run your own N-of-1 salt test? If you do, I’d love to hear what you learn.
Reminder: I’m an educational resource, not your physi


