Wednesday, July 6, 2011

South Asia at Health Crossroads with High Rates of Heart Disease, Diabetes, Obesity and Other Noncommunicable Diseases―New World Bank Report

Press Release No:2011/325/SAR
  
WASHINGTON, February 9, 2011 – A new World Bank report warns that South Asian countries  are facing a health crisis with rising rates of heart disease, diabetes, obesity, and other  noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), which disproportionately affect poor families, with possible  side effects of disability and premature death, and worsening poverty as people pay for medical  treatment out of their own pockets. 

According to the new report―Capitalizing on the Demographic Transition: Tackling  Noncommunicable Diseases in South Asia―heart disease in the region is now the leading  cause of death in adults aged 15-69, and South Asians suffer their first heart attacks six years  earlier than other groups worldwide.


A recent study of 52 countries from all over the world, including Bangladesh, India, Nepal,  Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, found that South Asians were six years younger (53 vs. 59 years) than  those in the rest of the world at their first heart attack and had high levels of risk factors, such as  diabetes and high lipids and low levels of physical activity and healthy dietary habits.

“This unfair burden is especially harsh on poor people, who, after heart attacks, face  life-long  major illnesses, have to pay for most of their  care out of their savings or by selling their  possessions, and then find themselves caught in a poverty trap where they can’t get better and  they can’t work,” says co-author Michael Engelgau, M.D., a World Bank Senior Public Health  Specialist on secondment from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Engelgau says that low birth weight—common among poor families in the eight countries of  South Asia—is an important risk factor for NCDs in adults and that multiple risk factors, such as  obesity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and glucose, frequently occur in the same person. Aging and Shifting Disease Patterns

The new report says that with average life expectancy in South Asia now at 64 years and rising,  people are getting older without the better living conditions, healthier nutrition, rising incomes, and  access to good healthcare that benefitted older people in developed countries in previous  decades. As a result, South Asians are becoming more vulnerable to heart disease, cancers,  diabetes, and obesity, and are creating significant new pressures on health systems to treat and  care for them.

Although the region has recorded yearly average growth of 6 percent over the last 20 years and  reduced poverty rates, this performance has not been inclusive or fast enough to significantly  reduce poverty and the risk factors for ill-health for the poor.
 
“South Asia is at a crossroads with rising inequality; poor people struggling to get access to  quality health, education, and infrastructure service; a growing share of the population aging  unhealthily; and with health systems that are failing to adjust to people’s needs,” says  Michal  Rutkowski, the World Bank’s South Asia Director for Human Development. Given existing health financing patterns in many low- and middle-income countries, Rutkowski  says that the costs associated with chronic NCDs are likely to weigh more heavily on those least  able to afford them, increasing the risk of economic loss and impoverishment. The poorer a country is, the more likely it that poor people will end up paying for their medical treatment  themselves.
 
“Tackling NCDs in South Asia early on with better prevention and treatment would significantly  spare poor people the crushing burden of poor health, lost earnings, deepening poverty,  and the  risk of disability and premature death, which are becoming all too common in the changing  demographics of the region,” says Rutkowski. Options for Better Managing NCDs

The new report encourages the eight countries of South Asia to adopt and carry out a number of  country and regional approaches to reduce both unhealthy risk factors in their general  populations and control heart disease, diabetes, cancers, and other NCDs. Regional strategies―Harmonizing health policies and strategies at a regional level boosts  effective NCD prevention and control efforts, especially for tobacco and food. Indeed, failure to  harmonize on tobacco may cause harm because the tobacco industry tends to target its  marketing efforts at countries with fewer restrictions and where tobacco is taxed less and is  easier to buy. Marketing from countries with fewer restrictions can therefore affect neighboring  countries with more restrictive policies. Also, countries with low cigarette prices relative to their  neighbors increase the incidence of smuggling.

NCD risk factors―Expanding and harmonizing tobacco advertising bans through collective  bargaining with media companies for advertising, and industry for tobacco labeling, would give  countries more leverage. Most countries ban tobacco advertising for national media, though  rarely try to with international media viewed within their borders. Standardizing and mandating  food labeling policies would provide a much stronger negotiating position for countries vis-à-vis  the food industry, as well as economies of scale (similar labels can be used for several countries).  Regional food labeling can also help local governments and their communities manage their  rising obesity problems, through increasing awareness of calorie content, and, possibly,  complement awareness campaigns for healthy foods.

Improving health systems—1) Collaborate on group purchasing of essential medications.  Increasing access and affordability of essential medications means that the negotiating power of  drug procurement units would increase (especially in smaller countries), and bulk purchasing  would reduce costs and help assure sufficient supplies. 2) Establish a health technology  assessment institution. It would be difficult for a single country to create and run such a body, yet  a regionally funded and managed institution could provide critical guidance on policy  development for intervention and treatment at the country level. 3) Synergize regional education  and training capacity. With perennial shortages of trained medical staff, and the considerable  “brain drain” effect of migrating doctors, nurses, and other health professionals, sharing NCD  education and training capacity at the regional level is an attractive option. 4) Establish a regional  network of surveillance and burden assessment. Such a network would benefit from crosscountry learning. It would also carry out a range of surveys across the region and from the  collective bargaining with institutions that conduct such surveys.
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To read the report: www.worldbank.org/sarncdreport

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