| 26 Mai 2014
GENEVA ¦ 22 May 2014 –The World Health Assembly  approved a resolution to improve the prevention, diagnosis and treatment  of viral hepatitis and proposals to improve global coordination of  efforts to address noncommunicable diseases like diabetes, cancers,  heart disease and stroke. In addition, the World Health Organization’s  Director-General and the President of the Health Assembly presented six  awards to leaders in public health.
 
 Viral hepatitis
 Viral hepatitis is responsible for 1.4 million deaths every year; 500  million people currently live with the disease.  There are five main  hepatitis viruses (A, B, C, D and E). Types B and C lead to chronic  disease in hundreds of millions of people and, together, are the most  common cause of liver cirrhosis and cancer. The resolution also  highlights the importance of  expanding hepatitis A and B vaccination  programmes and further strengthening infection control measures in  health care settings – such as strategies to improve the safety of  injections.  The resolution noted the importance of implementing  appropriate measures to protect groups such as people who inject drugs   from infection and to improve their access to diagnostics and  treatment. As most people with chronic hepatitis  B or C remain unaware  of their infection, there is also a need to improve screening.
 
 Delegates agreed to consider a range of measures to improve access to  quality and affordable hepatitis medicines and diagnostics, whilst  addressing intellectual property rights issues related to those  products.
 
 The delegates asked the WHO Secretariat to continue to help countries  develop robust strategies and goals on hepatitis and to report regularly  on the progress of such programmes, as well as examining the  feasibility of eliminating hepatitis B and C.
 
 Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs)
 
 Delegates approved  nine indicators to measure progress in implementing  the WHO Global NCD Action Plan. They also endorsed terms of reference  and workplan for a Global Coordination Mechanism. The Assembly  recommended that the Director-General submit proposed terms of reference  for a United Nations Interagency Task Force on NCDs to the United  Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).
 
 A United Nations High-level Meeting will take place in New York on 10-11  July 2014 to review progress on NCDs. Member States asked the WHO  Secretariat  to report  on the follow-up to this meeting at the next   Health Assembly.
 
 Awards
 Director-General Dr Margaret Chan and the President of the 67th World  Health Assembly, Dr Roberto Tomas Morales Ojeda, today awarded four   prizes to leaders in public health.
 
 The Ihsan Dogramaci Family Health Foundation Prize is awarded to  Professor Zulfiqar Bhutta (Pakistan) for his global work on child and  newborn survival and health.
 
 The Sasakawa Health Prize is awarded to the Leprosy Control Foundation  /Dominican Institution of Dermatology and Skin Surgery “Dr Hubert  Bogaert Diaz” to expand services for children affected by skin diseases  other than leprosy.
 
 The United Arab Emirates Health Foundation Prize was awarded to the  Institution for Research in Health (INISA) (Costa Rica) for its work on  gastric cancer and occupational exposure to pesticides.
 
 The Dr Lee Jong-wook Memorial Prize for Public Health was awarded  jointly to Professor Sinata Koulla-Shiro (Cameroon) and the Czech  Society of Cardiology (Czech Republic).