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Mobilising and Empowering Health NGOs and Civil Society in response to the NCDs. The Caribbean Health Summit. East Caribbean Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists. August 15, 2012. Hilton Hotel, Barbados. Prof. Timothy Roach Hon. Prof. Respiratory Disease, UWI Cave Hill.
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Mobilising and Empowering Health NGOs and Civil Society in response to the NCDs The Caribbean Health Summit. East Caribbean Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists. August 15, 2012. Hilton Hotel, Barbados. Prof. Timothy Roach Hon. Prof. Respiratory Disease, UWI Cave Hill. President, Barbados Cancer Society.
The Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases“the lifestyle diseases” • Cardiovascular Disease • Cancer • Chronic Respiratory Diseases • Diabetes
Heart Disease Cancers Injuries and violence Stroke Diabetes HIV/AIDS Hypertension Influenza/pneumonia Heart Disease Cancers Diabetes Stroke Hypertension HIV/AIDS Influenza/pneumonia Injuries and violence Leading Causes of Death in CARICOM Countries by Sex, 2004 (excluding Jamaica) MALES FEMALES Source: CAREC, based on country mortality reports
Crude Mortality Rates (per 100,000 population) for Select Diseases: (2000-2004) 140 120 Heart 100 Disease Cancers 80 Rates per 100,000 population Diabetes Stroke 60 Injuries 40 Hypertensive Diseases HIV/AIDS 20 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 CARICOM MemberStates Year Source: CAREC, based on mortality reports from countries
Injuries Y2004 HIV/AIDS Y2000 Chronic Disease 0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000 Potential Years of Life Lost <65years by Main Causes, 2000 & 2004, CARICOM Countries (minus Jamaica) Source: CAREC, based on country mortality reports Note: Chronic Disease includes heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes, hypertension, chronic respiratory disease ‘Injuries’ includes traffic fatalities, homicide, suicide, drowning, falls, poisoning
High BP Obesity Alcohol Tobacco High cholesterol Low fruits & veg Physical inactivity Unsafe sex Mortality Attributable to Select Risk Factors (Latin America & Caribbean) 0 100 200 300 400 500 Attributable Deaths (thousands)
The Problem “Three primary risk factors (tobacco, poor diet and physical inactivity) and three intermediate risk factors (hypertension, obesity and diabetes) lead to three diseases (heart disease, lung disease and cancer) resulting in 50% of all deaths”
Smoking Causes Death Smoking causes approximately: • 90% of all lung cancer deaths in men • 80% of all lung cancer deaths in women • 90% of deaths from chronic obstructive lung disease
Smoking and Increased Health Risks • Compared with nonsmokers smoking increases the risk of— • Coronary heart disease by 2 to 4 times • Stroke by 2 to 4 times • Men developing lung cancer by 23 times • Women developing lung cancer by 13 times • Dying from chronic obstructive lung diseases* by 12 to 13 times
Smoking and Cancer • Smoking causes the following cancers: • acute myeloid leukemia • kidney cancer • cancer of the pancreas • bladder cancer • cancer of the larynx • cancer of the pharynx • cancer of the cervix • lung cancer • stomach cancer • cancer of the esophagus • cancer of the oral cavity
Tobacco • New strategy focus children and inequalities . • Tobacco free society • Ban smoking in all public places -5 years • Total ban -10 years • Reintroduce above –inflation price escalator for tobacco products • Tough new targets for tobacco smuggling
Adam Smith The wealth of nations 1776 • Sugar, rum and tobacco are commodities which are nowhere necessities of life, which are become objects of almost universal consumption and which are extremely proper subjects of taxation.
OBESITY obesity begins in childhood
After a two-year tour of the United States, Michelangelo's David is returning to Italy... His tour sponsors were:
Humans are endowed with an ANCIENT PHYSIOLOGY moulded by famine ... .... and ill equipped to handle our modern food environment …. … especially when we do so little!
The recommended diet vs the advertised diet • Around three-quarters of food advertising to children is for sugary, fatty and salty foods. For every $1 spent by the WHO promoting healthy diets, $500 is spent by the food industry promoting unhealthy foods
The big Five – the foods that most concern us Snacks Fast foods Confectionery Sweetened cereals Soft drinks Energy-dense and salt rich foods: contribute high proportion of calories to the diet encourage passive over-consumption often displace other healthier foods.
Project key messages • Most adults in the Caribbean are already overweight. Modern living insures every generation is heavier than the last – “Passive Obesity”. • By 2030 60% of men and 50% of women could be clinically obese. Without action, obesity related diseases will cost an extra £49.9 Billion per year • The obesity epidemic cannot be prevented by individual action alone and demands a societal approach. • Tackling obesity requires far greater change than anything tried so far, and at multiple levels; personal, family, community and population. • Preventing obesity is a societal challenge, similar to climate change. It requires partnership between government, science, business, and civil society.
Hypertension • Uncontrolled hypertension contributes to 45% of all ill health from CVD • Hypertension uncontrolled in 80% of hypertensive Barbadians • 49 anti-hypertensive drugs available in Barbados National Formulary
CARICOM From community surveys, the prevalence of hypertension in adults 25-64 years of age was: Barbados 27.2 % Jamaica 24.0 % St. Lucia 25.9 % The Bahamas 37.5% Belize 37.3% Control of blood pressure would reduce the death rates from Cardiovascular Disease by about 15-20%.
Prevalence (%) of diabetes among adults in the Americas Source: Pan Am J Public Health 10(5), 2001; unpublished (CAMDI), Haiti (Diabetic Medicine); USA (Cowie, Diabetes Care)
80 70 60 Male 50 Rate/100,000 Female 40 30 20 1985 1990 1995 2000 Caribbean Trends in Diabetes Mortality
Estimated Cost of Diabetes and Hypertension as percent (%) of GDP
Purpose • To bring together a wide spectrum of partners from throughout the CARICOM countries – civil society, the business community, educators and researchers, policy makers to plan civil society’s response to the CNCD pandemic
Objectives • Provide a forum for cross section of representatives from various sectors of society to learn about CNCDs and consider how best to tackle them • Build capacity in important elements of civil society • Identify and promote evidence based best practices for addressing the CNCD epidemic in the Caribbean • Strengthen capacity of civil society to monitorimplementation of the POS Summit Declaration • Consider resource mobilization
Recent initiatives • Ratification of the FCTC • Establishment of NCD Commissions • Recognition of Annual Caribbean Wellness Day • National Chronic Disease Registry, Barbados • Risk Factor Surveillance • Healthy Caribbean Coalition public education campaign • National Nutrition improvement and salt reduction
Recent initiatives • CNCD National Summits held in Dominica and St. Lucia • Blood Pressure Monitoring initiative in barber shops and hairdressing salons developed in St. Kitts • Completion of STEPS survey for CNCDs and risk factors in Barbados, Dominica, BVI and St. Kitts and Nevis • Grenada completed a Workplace Wellness Summit (Part 1) • Expert consultations on Cancer Registries in Barbados, Antigua and Barbuda and Grenada
Areas of support and recommendations for further action • Establishment of NCD Commissions in all OECS countries • Ratification and full implementation of FCTC by all OECS countries • Implementation of a population salt reduction programmes in OECS countries • Support by OECS Governments for HCC led public education campaign on NCDs
Areas of support and recommendations for further action • Support for Annual Caribbean Wellness Day • Acceptance of Caribbean Civil Society Declaration and Action Plan for tackling NCDs • Official recognition of the Healthy Caribbean Coalition by OECS Ministers of Health
2000s: solid evidence • “The scientific evidence is compelling. Physical activity not only contributes to well-being, but is also essential for good health.” • Professor Sir Liam Donaldson • Chief Medical Officer, • Department of Health
What makes a civil society network successful ? • Integrity • Independent of vested and ideological interests • Dialogue not partnership that sells the soul • Shared values and goals • Connected – nexus - real time information • Become a player- “plugged in” where it maters- act on the inside and the outside
What makes a civil society network successful? • Movers and shakers-public health hero’s -calculated risks • Non compromised charities, professional, consumer, social policy and academic groups • Powerful individual members and patrons • Common issues • A social movement • Strategic –smart and tactical • Focus and clarity about goals
What makes a civil society network successful? • Advocacy – clarity – always be the voice of reason and reasonableness – acting in the public interest –advocacy bullets • Public opinion • Play to strengths of different advocacy styles across membership • Media links • Ability to respond quickly • Handling controversy • Forum - hot topics – common positions
What probably makes a civil society network successful? • Respect differences and have caveats to not necessarily represent everyone • Handling controversy –rapid responses • Human rights and freedoms • Policy acumen • Upstream - high impact : downstream - support • Don’t delude your self – do things that matter.
What probably makes a civil society network successful? • Marshalling and promulgating evidence and expertise • Argue cost effectiveness and cost savings • Rock solid ethics • Leadership and co-ordination- clear priorities • Cross sector and cross government • Productive and respectful links to senior civil servants
What probably makes a civil society network successful? • Mandates for change- social marketing mix - professional and political mandates • Good governance: Wise governance –keep organisations and people linked • Good organisation • Work together- trust-solidarity • Legal protections- cover your back • Quality
What probably makes a civil society network successful? • Representation • Consultations- voice • Transparency and openness • Membership surveys - sensitive close working links • Democratic working • Collective bids • Gossip, intelligence and ideas
What probably makes a civil society network successful? • Power of a public interest alliance • Energy, enthusiasm and passion • Develop political acumen – nanny state arguments, children, ST benefits, cost savings, co-benefits • Cross party political support for issues • The hallmark/touchstone of an effective functioning democracy
The role of civil society in promoting the publics’ health • Sustainable social change • Trusted • Independent • Non ideological • Advocacy – voice amplified by powerful alliances • Voice of the less well reached • Keeping public health a public good • Population health measures
The role of civil society in promoting the publics’ health • Countervailing force for the excesses of industry and unhelpful and unproven ideologies • Champion of the public interest
Architecture and characteristics • Cross government • Multi-sectoral • Environmental determinants • Population and individual • Whole systems impact • Multiple interventions • Natural experiments • Lifecourse