260 likes | 599 Views
WHO - Global and regional NCD commitments . Peter Sousa Hoejskov , Technical Officer Food Safety & NCD WHO Division of Pacific Technical Support (DPS) 55 th PIHOA Board Meeting, Pohnpei , FSM 11-13 March 2014. World Health Assembly in 2000:
E N D
WHO - Global and regional NCD commitments Peter Sousa Hoejskov, Technical Officer Food Safety & NCD WHO Division of Pacific Technical Support (DPS) 55th PIHOA Board Meeting, Pohnpei, FSM 11-13 March 2014
World Health Assembly in 2000: There is a strategic vision on how to address NCDs *Surveillance* Mapping the epidemic of NCDs and risk factors *Prevention* Reducing the level of exposure to risk factors *Management* Strengthen health care for people with NCDs
Setting the agenda: Vision and a global road map 2000 Global Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2003 Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health 2004 Action Plan on the Global Strategy for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2008 Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol 2009 WHO Global Status Report on NCDs 2010 2011 Political Declaration on NCDs 2012+ Realizing the commitments made in the Political Declaration
The UN High-level Meeting on NCDs was a defining moment for development cooperation: it sets a new global agenda that advances inclusive social and economic development. UN General Assembly NCD Review 2014: Review and assessment of the United Nations General Assembly of the progress achieved in the prevention and control of NCDs
The WHO Global NCD Action Plan 2013-2020unites governments, international partners and WHO around a common agenda Vision:A world free of the avoidable burden of NCDsGoal:To reduce the preventable and avoidable burden of morbidity, mortality and disability due to NCDs by means of multisectoral collaboration and cooperation at national, regional and global levels
The WHO Global NCD Action Plan 2013-2020 has six objectives with recommended actions for Member States, international partners and WHO Objective 4 To strengthen and orient health systems to address the prevention and control of NCDs through people-centred primary health care and universal health coverage Objective 5 To promote and support national capacity for high-quality research and development for the prevention and control of NCDs Objective 1 To strengthen international cooperation and advocacy to raise the priority accorded to prevention and control of NCDs in the development agenda and in internationally-agreed development goals Objective 2 To strengthen national capacity, leadership, governance, multisectoral action and partnerships to accelerate country response for the prevention and control of NCDs Objective 6 To monitor the trends and determinants of NCDs and evaluate progress in their prevention and control Objective 3 To reduce exposure to modifiable risk factors for NCDs through creation of health-promoting environments
Targets for NCD prevention and control TOBACCO FREE PACIFIC
At the World Health Assembly in May 2013, Member States adopted the Comprehensive Global Monitoring Framework for the Prevention and Control of NCDs, including a set of 25 indicators
What is next? Immediate actions for Member States 2014-2015 • Set national targetsfor 2025 in 2013, taking into account the 9 global targets • Develop national multisectoral NCD policies and plans to attain national targets for 2025, by addressing the three major components of the NCD strategy • Finalize and endorse Crisis Response Plans (CRP)
What is next? Priority actions recommended for Member States to reduce the exposure of populations and individuals to risk factors for NCDs • Implement interventions identified by WHO as "best buys" using WHO tools: • Tobacco use: • Tax increases • Smoke-free indoor work placesand public places • Health information and warnings about tobacco • Bans on adverting and promotion • Harmful use of alcohol: • Tax increases on alcoholic beverages • Comprehensive restrictions and bans on alcohol marketing • Restrictions on the availability of alcohol • Unhealthy diet and physical inactivity: • Salt reduction through mass media campaigns and reduced salt content in processed foods • Replacement of trans-fats with polyunsaturated fats • Public awareness programme about diet and physical activity • Marketing of foods and non-alcoholic beverages to children
What is next? Priority actions recommended for Member States to enable health systems to respond more effectively and equitably to the health-care needs of people with NCDs • Implement interventions identified by WHO as "best buys" into the basic primary health care: • Health system strengthening is key: • Prevention of liver cancer through hepatitis B immunization • Prevention of cervical cancer through screening and treatment of pre-cancerous lesions • Multidrug therapy to individuals who have had a heart attack or stroke and to persons with a high risk of a cardiovascular event in the next 10 years
What is next? Priority actions recommended for Member States to quantify and track NCDs and their determinants (as it provides the foundation for advocacy, national policy and action) • Implement the WHO Framework for NCD Surveillance, covering • monitoring of risk factors and determinants, • outcomes (mortality and morbidity) and • health system response • Integrate into the national health information systems • Develop national targets and indicators, based on Pacific targets, the WHO recommendations and WHA Resolutions
The WHO Framework for NCD Surveillance quantifies and tracks exposures, outcomes and health systems response A WHO Framework for NCD Surveillance • Exposures: • Behavioural risk factors: tobacco use, physical inactivity, harmful use of alcohol and unhealthy diet • Metabolic risk factors: overweight/obesity, raised blood pressure, glucose & cholesterol. • Social determinants: education, material well being, access to health care • Outcomes: • Mortality: NCD specific mortality • Morbidity: cancer incidence and type • Health System Response: • Interventions and health system capacity: infrastructure, policies and plans, access to key health care interventions and treatments, partnerships.
Set national targets and measure results • Member States are encouraged to adopt the global and Pacific voluntary targets as national targets • National adaptation should be guided by: • Current performance, • Current level of exposure • Programmes planned and in place • WHO is developing a Toolkit on NCD Surveillance, which will include a module on setting national targets and measuring results
Pacific Crisis Response Plans (CRP) • A framework to prioritize action in the short run (1-2 years) • Based on very cost-effective interventions (“Best Buys”) • Helps development partners focus support and technical assistance • CRPs are not additional NCD plans!
Summary • NCD is not only a threat to public health, but also to socio-economic development and prosperity • Targets and the way forward are clear – Countries need to scale up action individually and collectively • Surveillance, prevention and management of NCDs go hand-in-hand • CRPs help countries prioritize and progress towards the long-term goal of 25x25