Écrit par WHO			
				
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				04 Juin 2018			
			
				
		
				
				
		
1 June 2018 | GENEVA: A new report from  the World Health Organization (WHO) Independent High-level Commission on  Noncommunicable Diseases (NCDs) calls for urgent action to address  chronic diseases and mental health disorders. It demands high-level  political commitment and the immediate scaling up of actions to address  the epidemic of NCDs, the world’s leading causes of death and ill  health.
 
 Collectively, cancer, diabetes, lung and heart diseases kill 41 million  people annually, accounting for 71% of all deaths globally, 15 million  of which occur between the ages of 30 and 70 years. The report focuses  attention on growing, but often neglected, challenges like mental  disorders and obesity.
 
 President of Uruguay, Dr Tabaré Vázquez, called on world leaders to  “redouble efforts” to meet the Sustainable Development Goals target to  reduce premature death from NCDs by one-third by 2030 and to promote  mental health and wellbeing: “Preserving and improving people’s quality  of life is a way of enhancing human dignity in order to make progress in  terms of economic growth, social justice and human coexistence,” said  Dr Vázquez, who presented the report to WHO Director-General Dr Tedros  Adhanom Ghebreyesus in Geneva today. “Health is essential for peace and  democracy. It is not a matter of spending a lot, but of making good  investments.”
 
 The Commission makes six recommendations in its report: 
-  Heads of State and Government should  take responsibility for the NCD agenda, rather than delegating it to  ministers of health alone, as it requires collaboration and cooperation  across many sectors.
 
-  Governments should identify and  implement a specific set of priorities within the overall NCD and mental  health agenda, based on public health needs.
 
-  Governments should reorient health  systems to include NCDs prevention and control and mental health  services in their universal health coverage policies and plans.
 
-  Governments should increase effective  regulation, appropriate engagement with the private sector, academia,  civil society, and communities.
 
-  Governments and the international  community should develop a new economic paradigm for funding actions on  NCDs and mental health.
 
-  Governments need to strengthen  accountability to their citizens for action on NCDs and simplify  existing international accountability mechanisms.
 
  
 “We know the problem and we have the solutions, but unless we increase  financing for NCDs, and demand all stakeholders be held responsible for  delivering on their promises, we won’t be able to accelerate progress,”  said Commission Co-chair Dr Sania Nishtar. “The NCDs epidemic has  exploded in low- and middle-income countries over the last two decades.  We need to move quickly to save lives, prevent needless suffering, and  keep fragile health systems from collapsing.”
 
 Fulfilling the promise of universal health coverage, to ensure all  people everywhere can access quality health services without suffering  financial hardship, is one of WHO’s top
 priorities. The Commission’s report will  help guide countries as they make progress toward health for all and  tackle both NCDs and infectious killers.
 
 “WHO was founded 70 years ago on the conviction that health is a human  right to be enjoyed by all people, and not a privilege for the few,” WHO  Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “The recommendations of  this report are an important step towards realizing that right by  preventing the suffering and death caused by noncommunicable diseases.”
 
 By calling on Heads of State and Government to take ultimate  responsibility for NCDs, the report, which was also published  simultaneously in the medical journal The Lancet, recognizes  the need to ensure that health ministries have the influence they  require to ensure the issue is backed with the political will and  funding it merits.
 
 Delivering the report to the WHO Director-General is the first activity  of the Commission, which will continue to provide high-level support to  the NCD community by catalyzing action and financing, especially in  countries.
 
 On 27 September 2018, the United Nations General Assembly will host the  Third High-level Meeting on NCDs in New York. The Commission’s report  will help advise WHO as it prepares for this crucial occasion.
 
 The Commission’s Co-chairs include the presidents of Finland, Sri Lanka  and Uruguay, the Minister of Healthcare of the Russian Federation and Dr  Sania Nishtar, a leading NCDs expert and advocate and a former federal  minister of health from Pakistan. The Commission comprises health and  development leaders from governments, civil society and business.