Georgetown: Representatives of the Caribbean Community (Caricom) Governments ended a high-level meeting in Barbados this week by declaring that non-communicable diseases (NCDs)—such as heart disease, stroke, cancer and diabetes—are the greatest health and development threat facing the Caribbean.
They urged step-up efforts using all-of-Government and all-of-society approaches to tackle NCDs, and called for greater investments in health systems to reverse what they termed a “tsunami” that threatens economic and social development throughout the sub region.
“The truth is that our people are dying; our people are being disabled by chronic diseases,” said Carissa Etienne, Director of the Pan American Health Organisation/World Health Organisation (PAHO/WHO). “We are concerned that there is not enough being done to allow the Caribbean to reduce and prevent those deaths from chronic diseases. If we continue as we are now, we will not meet the targets we have set for ourselves.”
Approximately three of every four deaths in the Caribbean are currently from NCDs. More than 70 per cent of these deaths are premature, that is among people under 70 years old, and that proportion is increasing. NCDs place a heavy burden on individuals, families and societies due to suffering and deaths as well as high costs from treatment and care, lost productivity, and displaced resources from other sectors of the economy.
“We talk a lot about statistics, but there are faces behind them. We are talking about our mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers; we are talking about ourselves,” said Etienne. Participants said that NCDs are overwhelming Caribbean countries’ health services and challenging their sustainability, and at the same time are impeding progress toward universal health coverage and universal access. They said needed actions include reorganisation of health services and new models of care; strengthening of health sector governance and human resources for health; and the creation of physical and social environments that are conducive to healthy living.
Participants also discussed NCD “best buys”, that is, highly cost-effective measures that reduce people’s exposure to the top risk factors for NCDs. These measures include laws, regulations and taxation aimed at reducing consumption of tobacco, alcohol, sugar and salt. Because such measures can provoke resistance from the economic interests involved, adopting and implementing them requires active involvement and support from other sectors beyond health, including other areas of the Government and civil society.
“We need to empower civil society to be advocates, to help us get the political commitment that is necessary,” said Etienne. This week’s meeting concluded with Caribbean leaders renewing their commitment to the principles set out in Caricom’s 2007 Port of Spain Declaration as well as in the 2011 political declaration of the United Nations’ (UN) High-level Meeting on the Prevention and Control of NCDs and the formal 2014 UN review of progress on NCDs.
Participants called for particular focus on the following: strengthening of health systems; prioritised investment in primary health care; strengthening of surveillance and data collection systems, including through bilateral and regional cooperation; support from and collaboration with international development partners and inter-governmental organisations and ensuring that NCD prevention and control remain high on the Caribbean political agenda.
The “Forum of Key Stakeholders on NCDs: Advancing the NCD agenda in the Caribbean” was organised by PAHO/WHO in collaboration with the Health Ministry of Barbados and took place on June 8-9 in Bridgetown, Barbados. Participants included Ministers and other high-level delegates from Health Ministries, social services, environment, population, and development; Chief Medical Officers; and representatives of Caricom, the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States, the Caribbean Public Health Agency, United Nations agencies, collaborating agencies from Canada and the United States, development banks, academia and civil society.
You must be logged in to post a comment.