Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Sugary drinks tax could prevent decay and increase health equity: study

Monash University 3 mins read

A national Australian tax on sugary drinks could prevent more than 500,000 dental cavities and increase health equity over 10 years, a Monash University-led study has found.

 

Published in Health Economics, the collaboration with Deakin University and the University of Melbourne found that over 10 years, a 20 per cent sugar-sweetened beverage tax (SSB) had overall cost-savings of $63.5 million from a societal perspective.

 

The direct healthcare savings were $42.2 million, with 510,977 decayed teeth and 98.1 disability-adjusted life years - a measure of healthy life lost through premature death or disability due to illness or injury - averted.

 

Under a lifetime scenario for the current population until death, overall societal cost-savings were $176.6M, and direct healthcare savings $122.5 million, with 1,309,211 decayed teeth and 254.9 disability-adjusted life years averted.

 

“Our study demonstrates a 20 per cent tax is cost-effective to prevent dental caries and is likely to increase health equity because the cost-savings and health benefits occur for populations from lower socioeconomic advantage,” the authors found.

 

However, convincing governments and industry to implement it was a “major barrier”. The authors concluded that advocacy efforts should be directed at the Australian government with a health equity lens, and with industry stakeholders”.

 

A single serve of a sugar-sweetened beverage (375 mL) has an average of 39 grams of free sugars (Food Standards Australia & New Zealand, 2019).

 

Study author Mr Tan Nguyen, an oral health therapist and Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine PhD candidate, said SSB taxes had increased prices and decreased consumption internationally.

 

Mr Nguyen said Australia had no such taxes and research from an oral health prevention perspective was limited. This was only the second study published on dental caries.

 

“What is different is our dental caries model breaks it down by level of socioeconomic advantage,” Mr Nguyen said.

“To date, economic evaluations of Australian dental programs are scant. This is despite many interventions d
emonstrating clinical efficacy from Cochrane reviews, such as fluoride varnish, fissure sealants and the use of stainless-steel crowns rather than conventional dental fillings for deciduous (baby) teeth.”

 

Mr Nguyen said globally, the burden of oral diseases was significant, yet oral health was often excluded from evidence-based public health policy. He said previous Australian simulation modelling (Sharma et al., 2014) had shown such a tax would have varied impact on consumption, body weight and tax burden depending on household income.

 

“The major contributors impacting quality of life due to oral diseases are tooth decay, advanced gum disease, and severe tooth loss caused mostly by caries and gum disease,” he said.

 

“Poor oral health is highly prevalent in the Australian population and impacts mostly on vulnerable people.”

 

The study was Australia’s first to use ACE, a priority-setting method to inform health interventions that has been used in fields such as cancer, obesity and mental health. ACE encompasses economic theory, ethics, social justice, practical experience lessons and decision-makers’ needs.

 

This study investigated the cost-effectiveness of interventions for oral disease prevention, which can be implemented or scaled-up in Australia. It found the two major barriers to a sugar-sweetened beverage tax were lack of federal government support and industry pushback.

 

The new findings follow a 2019 paper published in The Lancet, ‘Oral diseases: a global public health challenge’, which concluded a radically different approach was needed to tackle the global challenge of oral diseases.

 

Mr Nguyen’s collaborative research demonstrated that limiting the availability of dietary free sugars through legislation, such as a 20 per cent SSB tax, had a high degree of certainty as a cost-effective strategy, but the Australian context needed further investigation.

 

For media enquiries please contact:

 

Monash University

Cheryl Critchley - Communications Manager (medical)
E:
[email protected]

T: +61 (0) 418 312 596

 

For more Monash media stories, visit our news and events site 


For general media enquiries please contact:
Monash Media
E: 
[email protected]
T: +61 (0) 3 9903 4840

 

***ENDS***

 

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 07/12/2025
  • 01:41
Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited

Protagonist and Takeda Present Longer-Term Data at ASH 2025 Showing Rusfertide Delivers Durable Response and Hematocrit Control in Polycythemia Vera

52-Week Results from the Phase 3 VERIFY Study of Rusfertide Demonstrated Sustained Hematocrit Control and Response, Defined by Absence of Phlebotomy Eligibility, with No New Safety SignalsThese Data Build on Positive 32-Week Primary Analysis from VERIFY, Which Met its Primary Efficacy Endpoint and All Four Key Secondary EndpointsPatients Crossing Over from Placebo to Rusfertide at 32 Weeks Achieved a Similar Response Rate to Those Initially Randomized to Rusfertide, with 77.9% Achieving Absence of Phlebotomy Eligibility Between Weeks 40-52Four-Year Results from the Combined REVIVE and Long-Term Extension THRIVE Study Demonstrated a 13-Fold Reduction in Annual Rate of Phlebotomies from Baseline NEWARK,…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 06/12/2025
  • 02:11
Arthur D. Little

Arthur D. Little and Vega IT Unveil Joint Venture for Digital Innovation

NEW YORK–BUSINESS WIRE– Arthur D. Little (ADL) and Vega IT today announced the formation of Axceler8 Solutions, a 50/50 joint venture created to design,…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care, Women
  • 05/12/2025
  • 10:11
Breast Cancer Trials

Bec’s Christmas wish amid cancer treatment

This Christmas, Bec’s wish is for her daughters to never face a breast cancer diagnosis like she has. “The only thing tougher than telling…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.