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Raising the priority of noncommunicable diseases in development work at global and national levels. Presentation for discussion (Not an official document).

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Presentation for discussion (Not an official document)

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  1. Raising the priority of noncommunicable diseases in development work at global and national levels Presentation for discussion (Not an official document)

  2. Four types of noncommunicable diseases are largely preventable by means of effective interventions that tackle shared modifiable risk factors

  3. fact 60% of the world's annual deaths are due to noncommunicable diseases.Approximately 25% of these deaths are premature and could be prevented 10% 70 million 60 million 5.8 M 26.0 M(above the age of 60) 50 million 40 million 35 million(60% of all deaths) Source: 30 million 9.0 M (below the age of 60) 25% of 35 million 20 million 18.0 M 10 million 0 Total number of deaths in the world (2004) Group III - Injuries Low-income countries Group II – Other deaths from noncommunicable diseases Group II – Premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases (below the age of 60), which are preventable Group I – Communicable diseases, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions

  4. fact More people die from heart diseases and strokes in the poorest developing countries than in the richest industrialized countries 8.2 m 9.0 m 2030 2.6 m 3.8 m 6.1 m 7.3 m 2015 2.6 m Source: 3.4 m Low income countries 5.1 m Lower middle-income countries 6.5 m 2004 Upper middle-income countries 2.4 m High income countries 3.0 m 0 2 million 4 million 6 million 8 million 10 million Estimated deaths from cardiovascular diseases (2004)

  5. fact In all developing countries, premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases account for a large enough share of the disease burden to merit a serious policy response The top-10 leading causes of death Source:

  6. Child sexual abuse Lead exposure Global climate change Unmet contraceptive need Illicit drug use Iron deficiency Unsafe health care injections Zinc deficiency Vitamin A deficiency Occupational risks Urban outdoor air pollution Sub-optimal breastfeeding Low fruit and vegetable intake Unsafe water, sanitation, hygiene Indoor smoke from solid fuels Alcohol use Overweight and obesity High cholesterol Underweight Unsafe sex Physical inactivity High blood glucose Tobacco use High blood pressure fact The risk of dying in developing countries from causes attributable to high-blood pressure, tobacco use, high blood glucose or physical inactivity Attributable deaths in developing countries by risk factor 7 million 6 million 5 million 4 million 3 million 2 million 1 million 0

  7. Without action, Africa will witness the largest increase in deaths from noncommunicable diseases in 2015 (vs 2004) fact 2.5 million 30% 25% 2.0 million 20% 1.5 million 15% 1.0 million 10% 5% 0% 0 Africa Americas East. Med Europe South- East Asia Western Pacific Africa Americas East. Med Europe South- East Asia Western Pacific

  8. fact Noncommunicable diseases are among the leading causes of death among women in developing countries, as well as high-income countries 10 leading causes of deaths in females (2004) Source: WHO's report on "Women and Health: today's evidence, tomorrow's agenda"

  9. fact At household level, noncommunicable diseases are affecting the poorest people in developing countries disproportionally Poverty at household level Populations in low- and middle-income countries Increased exposure to common modifiable risk factors: Unhealthy diets Physical inactivity Tobacco use Harmful use of alcohol Globalization Urbanization Population ageing Noncommunicable diseases: Cardiovascular diseases Cancers Diabetes Chronic respiratory diseases Loss of household income from unhealthy behaviours Loss of household income from poor physical status Limited access to effective and equitable health-care services which respond to the needs of people with noncommunicable diseases 14 million people die prematurely each year in developing countries from noncommunicable diseases Loss of household income from high cost of health care Poverty contributes to noncommunicable diseases and noncommunicable diseases contribute to poverty

  10. fact Noncommunicable diseases are the third largest global risk in terms of likelihood and the fourth largest global risk in terms of economic severity Oil spikes Retrenching from globalization Asset price collapse Noncommunicable diseases Food price volatility Financial crisis "A problem neither the developed world nor the developing world can afford" "Declining development assistance has already led to a significant reduction of public spending on health in many countries. When funds are limited, governments tend to focus on basic health services, in line with the MDGs, at the expense of the prevention and treatment of noncommunicable diseases." (WEF Global Risk 2010 Report) Infectious diseases World Economic Forum: Global Risk 2010 Report

  11. 5.3 M 20.0 M 8.1 M 17.4 M fact In developing countries, more than 8 million premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases per year are omitted from the MDGs 60 million 50 million 14.2 M 40 million 30 million Source: 20 million Not covered by the MDGs: More than 8 million premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases 10 million 0 million Total number of deaths in low- and middle-income countries (2004) Group III - Injuries Low-income countries Group II – Other deaths from noncommunicable diseases Group II – Premature deaths from noncommunicable diseases (below the age of 60), which are preventable Group I – Communicable diseases, maternal, perinatal and nutritional conditions

  12. fact International development agencies have been slow in responding to the call to raise the priority accorded to noncommunicable diseases in development work Health ODA Commitments (2007) in US$ billions HIV/AIDS & STDs $7.40 Health Policy & Admin. Management $1.65 Infectious Disease Control $1.33 Reproductive Health $1.16 Basic Health Care $1.14 • Total Health ODA: $22.1 billion • Health ODA for noncommunicable diseases: 503 million (~2%) • There is no OECD/DAC Creditor Reporting System code yet to track health commitments for the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases Malaria Control $0.80 Family Planning $0.53 Tuberculosis Control $0.45 Basic Nutrition $0.33 Medical Services $0.24 Basic Health Infrastructure $0.23 Medical Research $0.22 Medical Education/Training $0.21 Health Education $0.06 Water Supply/Sanitation - Large Systems $3.90 Water resources policy/admin. mgmt $0.93 Basic Drinking Water Supply & Sanitation $0.92 Waste Management/Disposal $0.42 River Development $0.10 Water Resources Protection $0.06 Water Education/Training $0.01 Source: Kaiser Family Foundation (www.kff.org/globalhealth) (Based on analysis of data obtained via online query of the OECD Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Database and Creditor Reporting System (CRS) on 31 May 2009)

  13. fact In May 2008, WHO Member States started to mobilize a global response to address noncommunicable diseases, with a particular focus on developing countries Global Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2000 Global Strategy on Infant and Young Child Feeding 2002 WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control 2003 2004 Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health 2008 Action Plan on the Global Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases

  14. The 2008-2013 Action Plan for the Global Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases was endorsed by the World Health Assembly in May 2008 fact Six objectives: 1. Raising the priority accorded to noncommunicable diseases in development work at global and national levels, and integrating prevention and control of non-communicable diseases into policies across all government departments 2. Establishing and strengthening national policies and programmes 3. Reducing and preventing risk factors 4. Prioritizing research on prevention and health care 5. Strengthening partnerships 6. Monitoring NCD trends and assessing progress made at country level Under each of the six objectives, there are sets of actions for Member States, the WHO Secretariat and international partners

  15. fact Many public health leaders are calling on global development initiatives to take into account the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases • Regional Ministerial Meeting on Health Literacy (Beijing, 29-30 April 2009) • Regional Ministerial Meeting on Noncommunicable Diseases and Injuries, Poverty and Development (Qatar, 10-11 May 2009) • ECOSOC High-level Segment on Global Health (Geneva, 6-9 July 2009) • ECOSOC Ministerial Roundtable Meeting on Non-communicable Diseases and Injuries (Geneva, 8 July 2009) Doha Declaration on Noncommunicable Diseases ECOSOC Ministerial Declaration Continuing discussions at the UN General Assembly

  16. High-level forums are starting to call for the inclusion of noncommunicable diseases into discussions on development fact

  17. fact At the occasion of the 2009 ECOSOC High-level Segment, WHO launched a new global network to combat noncommunicable diseases (NCDnet) on 8 July 2009

  18. fact NCDnet is composed of the WHO Secretariat staff, an International Advisory Council, NCDnet Global and Regional Forum meetings and functional Working Groups WHO International Advisory Council Funding/Resourcing Mechanisms Global/Regional Forum Meetings Working groups Advocacy and Communications Innovative Resourcing Mechanisms Monitoring and evaluation Partnership capacity building

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