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Definition of the ‘health transition’ Trends of disease patterns in populations The 4 stages of the epidemiological transition The cardiovascular disease transition Engines of the health transition Urbanization, demographic, lifestyle, socioeconomic and health care
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Definition of the ‘health transition’ • Trends of disease patterns in populations • The 4 stages of the epidemiological transition • The cardiovascular disease transition • Engines of the health transition • Urbanization, demographic, lifestyle, socioeconomic and health care • Other determinants of NCDs Impact of NCDs on public health • Predicted trends in disease patterns, ‘Global Burden of Disease’ • The double burden of disease • Impact of NCDs on public health • Evidence for the preventability of CVD • Strategies for the primary prevention of CVD • Public health response to emerging CVD IUMSP-GCT
The health transition predicts an unprecedented epidemic of NCD/CVD in developing countries • Is there enough evidence that CVD can be prevented at the first place ? Yes!! IUMSP-GCT
Primary prevention of coronary disease through diet and lifestyle (Nurses’ Health Study, 89141 women )
Low risk factor profile is associated with low CVD mortality (several US cohorts)
Risk status, income and CVD mortality: low RF profile predicts low CVD mortality irrespective of income • Men aged 35-57 • MRFIT IUMSP-GCT
CVD risk factors: large potential for prevention - Non modifiable RF: age, sex, history Behavioral RF: Physiological RF: Endpoints: Smoking Hypertension • Heart disease Unhealthy diet • Stroke Cholesterol (salt, fat, fruit & veg ) • Vascular disease Diabetes Sedentary lifestyles • Some cancers Obesity Resp . disease Socio economic & - cultural determinants Early life characteristics * modifiable IUMSP-GCT
Cardiovascular disease: a multifactorial disease • Reduce blood pressure • Reduce serum cholesterol • Reduce the number of smokers • Reduce the number of persons with overweight • Ensure healthy diet (~change diet) • Prevent (and control) diabetes • Improve social conditions IUMSP-GCT
Definition of the ‘health transition’ • Trends of disease patterns in populations • The 4 stages of the epidemiological transition • The cardiovascular disease transition • Engines of the health transition • Urbanization, demographic, lifestyle, socioeconomic and health care • Other determinants of NCDs • Predicted trends in disease patterns, ‘Global Burden of Disease’ • The double burden of disease • Impact of NCDs on public health • Evidence for the preventability of CVD • Strategies for the primary prevention of CVD • Public health response to emerging CVD IUMSP-GCT
The health transition predicts an unprecedented epidemic of NCD/CVD in developing countries • Do we know enough to prevent this CVD epidemic in the first place? Yes!! • Do we know enough to make a difference? Yes!! IUMSP-GCT
The health transition in developing countries: which possible responses ? 4 engines for heath transition: • Demographic (populations get older) • Not modifiable • Lifestyle-epidemiologic (age-specific risk factor rates change) • Modifiable • Socio-economic (differential risk factors levels across SES) • Modifiable • Health services (access/use of preventive & curative services) • Modifiable IUMSP-GCT
Linear relation between relative risk of CVD and risk factor level in populations (the example of diastolic BP and stroke, Eastern Asia) IUMSP-GCT
Relative risk, RF prevalence and attributable fraction: low impact on strategies limited to high risk patients (the case of blood pressure and CHD)
Strategies to prevent the emergence of NCD/CVD Primary prevention (limit the number of new cases) Population strategy • Public health approach • Targets population High risk strategy • Clinical management • Targets individuals IUMSP-GCT
Public health approach vs. high risk strategy High-risk Population Advantages · · Radical ( incidence) Benefit for individual large ¯ Advantages · · Easy to understand, hence Potential large benefit motivation and rewards for · Cost effective (policy) individuals · Can target unaware · Needs person's cooperation population groups Limitations · · Need for mass change is hard Impact on total burden small to communicate Limitations · Often misused · Interventions other than · Costly (screening) policies hard to implement · Palliative (does not solve · Benefit for individual small, overall problem, 'rescue') hence weak motivation of · Distracts from population individuals and physicians approaches · Interventions can challenge vested interests/societal norms
Estimated stroke/CHD deaths that could be averted in 2020 by applying ‘population’ and ‘high-risk’ preventive strategies Combined population and high risk approaches ~ additive
Yield of a screening and treatment (high risk) strategy at population level: long-term compliance to a 1-tablet/day antihypertensive medication*
Definition of the ‘health transition’ • Trends of disease patterns in populations • The 4 stages of the epidemiological transition • The cardiovascular disease transition • Engines of the health transition • Urbanization, demographic, lifestyle, socioeconomic and health care • Other determinants of NCDs • Predicted trends in disease patterns, ‘Global Burden of Disease’ • The double burden of disease • Impact of NCDs on public health • Evidence for the preventability of CVD • Strategies for the primary prevention of CVD • Public health response to emerging CVD IUMSP-GCT
Areas for public health interventions & policies to prevent and control NCD/CVD in developing countries • Reduction of sodium consumption • developed countries: ~75% in processed food; developing countries: often most from ‘discretionary’ use (opportunity) • Food policies promoting healthy foods • Interventions/policies to promote physical exercise • Tobacco control • legislation, Framework Convention of Tobacco Control • Health education integrated in school curriculum • In all instances, need for multisectoral approach
Constraints for NCD/CVD prevention in developing countries • Limited recognition/available data of major NCDs • Double burden of disease • Lack of commitment at international level • Prevention not taken seriously (market pressure favoring therapy) • Failure to influence the policy of government departments • Conditions like stroke/CHD considered diseases for the specialist • Health care needs not addressed ‘prospectively’ by existing health systems (lack of perspective of ‘health transition’) • Costs are rising and resources are dwindling
Preventing NCD/CVD in developing countries: a window of opportunity • Relatively low levels of some risk factors in many developing countries • Opportunity for prevention in the first place (‘primordial prevention’) • Unlike for western countries (where CVD epidemics was understood at its peak and addressed mainly through case-management • Prevention is the best option as an approach mainly based on case-management is not affordable for most DC • Monitor trends in CVD risk factors IUMSP-GCT
Global strategy for the prevention and control of NCD/CVD in developing countries Prevention in the first place • reduce major risk factors through population strategy • targeted high risk strategies Case management • identify and promote cost-effective and affordable interventions Surveillance • assess the patterns and trends of main risk factors (mortality: the past; morbidity: the present; risk factors: the future)
Health transition and emerging NCD/CVD in developing countries: implications for the public health response • The paradigm of the health transition provides an evolutionary perspective which transcends the limitations of confined cross-sectional views of the CVD epidemic and argues towards strategic choices of policies and programs which take into account the present as well the future burdens of CVD. • The direction of the epidemic in developing countries is clear and the dimensions of the future burden can be predicted by combined demographic and economic models. • The case for preventive public health action becomes stronger when it is recognized that the future health care demands of a full-blown epidemic will be well beyond the capacity of the public health system.
Health transition and emerging NCD/CVD in developing countries: the way forward • Reappraise the coming NCD/CVD epidemic • Apply the knowledge • Focus on primary prevention with focus on health policies • Target high risk strategies (hypertension, diabetes) • Identify and apply low cost and affordable interventions for case management • Set surveillance systems (particularly risk factors) • Need to strengthen capacity building, leadership, partnership