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Priority actions for the non-communicable disease crisis

Authors :
Beaglehole, Robert
Bonita, Ruth
Horton, Richard
Adams, Cary
Alleyne, George
Asaria, Perviz
Baugh, Vanessa
Bekedam, Henk
Billo, Nils
Casswell, Sally
Cecchini, Michele
Colagiuri, Ruth
Colagiuri, Stephen
Collins, Tea
Ebrahim, Shah
Engelgau, Michael
Galea, Gauden
Gaziano, Thomas
Geneau, Robert
Haines, Andy
Hospedales, James
Jha, Prabhat
Keeling, Ann
Leeder, Stephen
Lincoln, Paul
McKee, Martin
Mackay, Judith
Magnusson, Roger
Moodie, Rob
Mwatsama, Modi
Nishtar, Sania
Norrving, Bo
Patterson, David
Piot, Peter
Ralston, Johanna
Rani, Manju
Reddy, K Srinath
Sassi, Franco
Sheron, Nick
Stuckler, David
Suh, Il
Torode, Julie
Varghese, Cherian
Watt, Judith
Source :
The Lancet; April 2011, Vol. 377 Issue: 9775 p1438-1447, 10p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The UN High-Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) in September, 2011, is an unprecedented opportunity to create a sustained global movement against premature death and preventable morbidity and disability from NCDs, mainly heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory disease. The increasing global crisis in NCDs is a barrier to development goals including poverty reduction, health equity, economic stability, and human security. The LancetNCD Action Group and the NCD Alliance propose five overarching priority actions for the response to the crisis—leadership, prevention, treatment, international cooperation, and monitoring and accountability—and the delivery of five priority interventions—tobacco control, salt reduction, improved diets and physical activity, reduction in hazardous alcohol intake, and essential drugs and technologies. The priority interventions were chosen for their health effects, cost-effectiveness, low costs of implementation, and political and financial feasibility. The most urgent and immediate priority is tobacco control. We propose as a goal for 2040, a world essentially free from tobacco where less than 5% of people use tobacco. Implementation of the priority interventions, at an estimated global commitment of about US$9 billion per year, will bring enormous benefits to social and economic development and to the health sector. If widely adopted, these interventions will achieve the global goal of reducing NCD death rates by 2% per year, averting tens of millions of premature deaths in this decade.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01406736 and 1474547X
Volume :
377
Issue :
9775
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The Lancet
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs23714348
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60393-0