| 18 Mai 2018
16 May, 2018 – Geneva: A new WHO report launched today shows that the  world’s poorest countries can gain US$350 billion by 2030 by scaling up  investments in preventing and treating chronic diseases, like heart  disease and cancer, that cost an additional US$1.27 per person annually.  Such actions would save more than 8 million lives over the same period.
 
 The report, titled Saving lives, spending less: a strategic response to NCDs,  reveals, for the first time, the financing needs and returns on  investment of WHO’s cost-effective and feasible “best buy” policies to  protect people from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), the world’s leading  causes of ill health and death.
 
 It shows that for every US$1 invested in scaling up actions to address  NCDs in low- and lower-middle-income countries (LLMICs), there will be a  return to society of at least US$7 in increased employment,  productivity and longer life.
 
 “The overarching message of this powerful new WHO report is optimistic,”  says WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “Tackling NCDs  is an opportunity to improve health and economies.”
 
 If all countries use these interventions, the world would move  significantly closer to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 3.4 to  reduce premature death from NCDs by one-third by 2030. Among the most  cost-effective “best buy” interventions are increasing taxes on tobacco  and alcohol, reducing salt intake through the reformulation of food  products, administering drug therapy and counselling for people who have  had a heart attack or stroke, vaccinating girls aged 9─13 years against  human papillomavirus and screening women aged 30─49 years for cervical  cancer.
 
 "NCDs impose huge economic costs that fall heaviest on the low- and  middle-income countries that can least afford them. This report makes  the case for bold action against NCDs from a business perspective, and  it outlines some of the most effective ways to reduce their toll, which  can help to direct more resources to where they are needed most,” says  WHO Global Ambassador for Noncommunicable Diseases Michael R. Bloomberg.
 
 LLMICs currently bear the brunt of premature deaths from NCDs: almost  half (7.2 million) of the 15 million people who die globally every year  between the age of 30 and 70 are from the world’s poorest countries. Yet  global financing for NCDs is severely limited, receiving less than 2%  of all health funding.
 
 But the report indicates that taking effective measures to prevent and  control NCDs costs just an additional US$ 1.27 per person per year in  LLMICs.
 
 The health gains from this investment will, in turn, generate US$350  billion through averted health costs and increased productivity by 2030,  and save 8.2 million lives during the same period.
 
 For every US$1 invested in each policy area, the following returns have been documented:
- US$12.82 from promoting healthy diets
 - US$9.13 from reducing the harmful use of alcohol
 - US$7.43 from lower tobacco use
 - US$3.29 from providing drug therapy for cardiovascular disease
 - US$2.80 from increasing physical activity
 - US$2.74 from managing cancer
 
NCDs kill 41 million people each year, comprising 72% of all deaths  globally. The number of deaths from NCDs is increasing across the world,  including in LLMICs. As typically long-term conditions, NCDs are  especially detrimental to families in low-resource settings, as lengthy  and expensive treatment drains household resources, forces families into  poverty and stifles development. Saving lives, spending less: a strategic response to NCDs issues  a clear call for donors to support governments by offering funding as a  catalyst for ambitiously scaling up the “best buy” policies which would  save millions of lives.
 
 Related links
 
 To read the full document, go to: http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/272534/WHO-NMH-NVI-18.8-eng.pdf









