| 19 Février 2018
16 FEBRUARY 2018 | GENEVA - WHO is announcing today a  new high-level comission, comprised of heads of state and ministers,  leaders in health and development and entrepreneurs. The group will  propose bold and innovative solutions to accelerate prevention and  control of the leading killers on the planet – noncommunicable diseases  (NCDs) like heart and lung disease, cancers, and diabetes.
 
 The WHO Independent Global High-level Commission on NCDs is co-chaired  by President Tabaré Vázquez of Uruguay; President Maithripala Sirisena  of Sri Lanka; President Sauli Niinistö of Finland; Veronika Skvortsova,  Minister of Healthcare of the Russian Federation; and Sania Nishtar,  former Federal Minister of Pakistan.
 
 Seven in 10 deaths globally every year are from NCDs, the main  contributors to which are tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol, unhealthy  diets, and physical inactivity. More than 15 million people between the  ages of 30 and 70 years die from NCDs annually. Low- and lower-middle  income countries are increasingly affected, with half of premature  deaths from NCDs occurring in those countries. Many lives can be saved  from NCDs through early diagnosis and improved access to quality and  affordable treatment, as well as a whole-of-government approach to  reduce the main risk factors.
 
 “NCDs are the world’s leading avoidable killers but the world is not  doing enough to prevent and control them,” says Dr Vázquez. “We have to  ask ourselves if we want to condemn future generations from dying too  young, and living lives of ill health and lost opportunity. The answer  clearly is ‘no.’ But there is so much we can do to safeguard and care  for people, from protecting everyone from tobacco, harmful use of  alcohol, and unhealthy foods and sugary drinks, to giving people the  health services they need to stop NCDs in their tracks.”
 
 Mr Michael R. Bloomberg, WHO Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable  Diseases and Commission member, said: “For the first time in history,  more people are dying of noncommunicable diseases, such as heart disease  and diabetes, than infectious diseases. This loss of human life spares  no one — rich or poor, young or old - and it imposes heavy economic  costs on nations. The more public support we can build for government  policies that are proven to save lives - as this Commission will work to  do - the more progress we'll be able to make around the world."
 
 The new Commission was established by WHO Director-General Dr Tedros  Adhanom Ghebreyesus and runs until October 2019. It will provide  actionable recommendations to contribute to the Third United Nations  General Assembly High-level Meeting on NCDs scheduled for the second  half of 2018. This will include the submission of its first report to Dr  Tedros in early June.
 
 “Everybody deserves the right to a healthy life,” says Dr Tedros. “We  can beat the drivers of the NCD epidemic, which are among the world’s  main obstacles to health. I am looking to the Commission to show us new  ways to unblock the barriers to good health, and identify innovative,  bold and practical actions steps to scale up prevention and treatment of  NCDs and provide health for all.”
 
 Co-chair Dr Nishtar says the Commission’s establishment has come at an  opportune time, as the world prepares for the UN High-level Meeting on  NCDs. “This year, governments will be held to account on progress they  have made in protecting their citizens from NCDs,” says Dr Nishtar.  “While there have been improvements in some countries and regions, the  overall rate of progress has been unacceptably slow. This is resulting  in too many people suffering and dying needlessly from NCDs, and leaving  families, communities and governments to bear the human and economic  costs.”
 
 The World Health Assembly has endorsed the set of WHO “best buys” and  other cost-effective interventions proven to prevent or delay most  premature NCD deaths. Such measures, which can be readily scaled up in  countries, target prevention and treatment of, and raising awareness  about, NCDs.
 http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2018/world-leaders-ncds/en/









