India: first to adapt the Global Monitoring Framework on noncommunicable diseases (NCDs)
January
2015
Every
year, roughly 5.8 million Indians die from heart and lung diseases,
stroke, cancer and diabetes. In other words, 1 in 4 Indians risks
dying from an NCD before they reach the age of 70.
WHO/SEARO/Payden
“Heart
diseases, diabetes, cancers, and chronic respiratory diseases now
affect younger and younger people,” says Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh,
Regional Director of WHO South-East Asian Region. “The millions of
productive individuals lost prematurely to NCDs are seriously
undermining social and economic development.”
But
the country is not watching and waiting for the burden to grow.
Instead, the Government of India is taking immediate action and
targeting the greatest risk factors contributing to NCDs—unhealthy
diets, physical inactivity, tobacco and alcohol use, and air
pollution.
Specific national targets and indicators
In
line with WHO’s Global action plan for the prevention and
control of NCDs 2013-2020, India is the first country to develop
specific national targets and indicators aimed at reducing the number
of global premature deaths from NCDs by 25% by 2025. A National
Multisectoral Action Plan that outlines actions by various sectors in
addition to the health sector, to reduce the burden of NCDs and their
risk factors, is in the final stage of development.
“It
is heartening to see the Government of India taking the leadership
role in the prevention and control of NCDs,” says Dr Nata Menabde,
WHO Representative to India. “As a partner to the global agenda on
prevention and control of NCDs, we are committed to supporting
national efforts towards strengthening the health systems to address
the growing burden of NCDs and comorbidities.”
“Heart
diseases, diabetes, cancers, and chronic respiratory diseases now
affect younger and younger people.” Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh,
Regional Director of WHO South-East Asian Region
10th target: household air pollution
The
global action plan lists 9 targets for countries to set. But India
has taken the unprecedented step of setting a tenth target to address
household air pollution —a major health hazard in the South-East
Asian Region due to burning of solid biomass fuel and secondhand
smoke.
Globally,
4 million deaths are caused by exposures to household (indoor) air
pollution and 3.7 million deaths are attributed to outdoor air
pollution. Approximately 40% of the deaths from indoor air pollution
and 25% of those attributed to outdoor air pollution occur in the WHO
South-East Asia Region.
“We
must act to protect people from air pollution. The poor, living near
busy roads or industrial sites, are disproportionately affected by
air pollution,” says Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh. “Women and
children pay the heaviest price, as they spend more time at home
breathing in smoke and soot from cooking stoves.
India’s
National Monitoring Framework for Prevention and Control of NCDs
calls for a 50% relative reduction in household use of solid fuel and
a 30% relative reduction in prevalence of current tobacco use by
2025. Countries in the South-East Asia Region have also committed to
reducing household air pollution as part of the Regional Acton Plan
for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases 2013-2020.
Implementing WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
Additionally,
India has implemented WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
aimed at reducing the demand for tobacco products. The country has
prohibited sales of tobacco products around educational institutions,
restricted tobacco imagery in films and TV programmes, banned some
smokeless tobacco products and developed tobacco-free guidelines for
educational institutions.
In
April 2015, the country will go a step further and require tobacco
pictorial warnings to cover 85% of the package. This effort is an
excellent example of a “best buy” or cost effective, high impact
intervention for combating NCDs.

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