| 27 Septembre 2015
 WHO statement - 25 September 2015- The World Health Organization welcomes the  launch of  the 2030 Sustainable Development (SDG) agenda, and commits to work with  partners around the world to achieve the new development goals.
WHO statement - 25 September 2015- The World Health Organization welcomes the  launch of  the 2030 Sustainable Development (SDG) agenda, and commits to work with  partners around the world to achieve the new development goals.
Building on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the SDG agenda  demonstrates unprecedented scope and ambition. Poverty eradication,  health, education, and food security and nutrition remain priorities,  but the 17 SDGs also encompass  a broad range of economic, social and  environmental objectives, as well as the promise of more peaceful and  inclusive societies. 
 
 SDG 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages,  profiles health as a desirable outcome in its own right. Importantly,  however, health is also presented as an input to other goals, and a  reliable measure of how well sustainable development is progressing in  general.
 
 The health goal itself includes new targets  for key issues on which  major progress has been made under the MDGs.  The global HIV, TB and  malaria epidemics have been turned around. Worldwide, child mortality  and maternal mortality have dropped greatly, by 53% and more than 40%  respectively since 1990.
 
 But much remains to be done. Reports of global progress have often  masked discrepancies in progress between and within countries. There is a  recognition of the need to focus not only on ensuring that people  survive, but that they thrive as well.
 
 It has also become clear that the world would be a healthier place if  there were global targets for a much wider range of issues. Importantly,  the new goal  includes targets for tackling noncommunicable diseases.  It also covers health security; reproductive, maternal, newborn, child  and adolescent health; infectious diseases and universal health  coverage.  
 
 WHO looks forward to collaborating with partners to meet all these  targets, and particularly welcomes the inclusion of universal health  coverage.  Universal health coverage expresses the very spirit of the  new development agenda, with its emphasis on equity and social inclusion  that leaves no one behind.