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Non- communicable disease and mental
health in low and middle income countries

                    Richard Smith
   Director, UnitedHealth Chronic Disease Initiative
Agenda


•   Definitions
•   The UN meeting
•   Scale of the problem
•   Causes
•   How best to respond (concentrating on NCDs)?
•   What must be done?
Non-communicable disease
     • WHO defines non-communicable disease (NCD) as
       cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory
       disease, and certain cancers.
     • All of these have in common that they are caused
       predominantly by smoking, poor diet, physical
       inactivity, and the harmful use of alcohol.
     • Doesn't include mental health and many other
       chronic conditions
Source: World Health Organization, 2005
In September 2011 the UN held a high level meeting on
NCDs (did not include mental health)

• Only the second high level meeting of the UN on health
• The first in 2001 led to the Global Fund for AIDS, TB,
  and malaria
• Led to a flurry of activity and a raising of consciousness
  (although not among ordinary people)
• 130 countries spoke; 200 civil society representatives
  attended; 40 side meetings
• Russia committed $60m and Australia $3.9m
Future commitments with target dates


•   2012: work with WHO and all stakeholders to
    set targets
•   2013: review of the MDGs; integrate NCDs
•   2014: UN review of progress
What was achieved?


•   On global agenda
•   Meeting was a step change
•   Understanding that a response must go well beyond
    health sector
•   “Whole of society, whole of government”
•   Development issue
•   Civil society movement important
•   Beginning not the end
What didn't happen

•   Nothing on mental health. Should there be another high level meeting?
•   No new funding apart from Russia and Australia, didn't expect it
•   WHO costing report and WEF report came too late, some best buys got
    lost
•   NCD Alliance has issues with best buys—major omissions
•   Alcohol weak
•   No champion countries—Australia, Norway
•   China and India not very visible; too few G8 champions
•   Not many LMIC stepping forward
•   Yet to engage the public—must do by 2014
Burden of disease
Global Causes of Death (2006)
Chronic diseases:                      Infectious diseases:
                                                HIV/AIDS 4.9%

Heart disease                              Tuberculosis 2.4%
30.2%
                                                 Malaria 1.5%


                         Total:                           Other
                                                     Infectious
                         58.0M                        Diseases
                                                         20.9%
Cancer
15.7%                                             Injuries 9.3%
                                   The total number of people
Diabetes                          dying from chronic diseases is
1.9%                              double that of all infectious
Other chronic diseases            diseases including HIV/AIDS,
                                  tuberculosis and malaria
15.7%                             (Nature, 2007).
Leading Causes of Mortality and Burden of Disease
                        world, 2004

          Mortality                                     DALYs
                                      %                                        %
1. Ischaemic heart disease       12.2     1.    Lower respiratory infections 6.2
2. Cerebrovascular disease        9.7     2.    Diarrhoeal diseases       4.8
3. Lower respiratory infections 7.1       3.    Depression     4.3
4. COPD         5.1                       4.    Ischaemic heart disease       4.1
5. Diarrhoeal diseases         3.7        5.    HIV/AIDS 3.8
6. HIV/AIDS 3.5                           6.    Cerebrovascular disease       3.1
7. Tuberculosis            2.5            7.    Prematurity, low birth weight 2.9
8. Trachea, bronchus, lung cancers 2.3    8.    Birth asphyxia, birth trauma 2.7
9. Road traffic accidents      2.2        9.    Road traffic accidents     2.7
10. Prematurity, low birth weight 2.0     10.   Neonatal infections and other     2.7




                                                                                10
Burden of disease by broad cause group and region,
                       2004




                                                     11
Age-standardized DALYs for noncommunicable
diseases by major cause group, sex and country
              income group, 2004




                                                 12
Deaths from chronic disease are displacing deaths from
infectious disease even in rural Bangladesh
Shifting Patterns of Global Health

Deaths, % of Total, 2005                          Forecast Deaths, 2006-
                                        Total     2015, % Change
                                      Deaths, M

                                        13.7
Low
                                        12.3
                                        2.5
Lower-middle
                                        13.2
                                        0.5
Upper-middle
                                        2.7
                                        0.5
High
                                        7.1

               0   20    40     60   80 100       -10    -5   0   5   10   15   20   25

               Infectious diseases    Chronic diseases
Ten leading causes of burden of disease,
          world, 2004 and 2030




                                           16
Causes of NCDs
Leading causes of attributable global mortality and
                    burden of disease, 2004

       Attributable Mortality                       Attributable DALYs
                                    %                                          %
1.    High blood pressure        12.8     1.    Childhood underweight 5.9
2.    Tobacco use 8.7                     2.    Unsafe sex     4.6
3.    High blood glucose        5.8       3.    Alcohol use 4.5
4.    Physical inactivity   5.5           4.    Unsafe water, sanitation, hygiene 4.2
5.    Overweight and obesity 4.8          5.    High blood pressure     3.7
6.    High cholesterol      4.5           6.    Tobacco use 3.7
7.    Unsafe sex        4.0               7.    Suboptimal breastfeeding      2.9
8.    Alcohol use 3.8                     8.    High blood glucose       2.7
9.    Childhood underweight 3.8           9.    Indoor smoke from solid fuels     2.7
10.   Indoor smoke from solid fuels 3.3   10.   Overweight and obesity 2.3

59 million total global deaths in 2004    1.5 billion total global DALYs in 2004



                                                                                   18
Deaths attributed to 19 leading factors,
    by country income level, 2004




                                           19
We can make a difference: death rates in the US,
                            1900-1996




Decline
Yet only 3% of global
 health aid ($21 billion)
goes to NCDs and mental
         health.
Pervasive myths that have prevented action

• Global economic development will improve all health
  conditions
• Chronic disease results from freely adopted risk
• Chronic diseases are diseases of the elderly
• Chronic diseases are diseases of the rich
• Benefits of countering chronic disease accrue only to the
  individual
• We can fix chronic disease as we are fixing infectious disease
• We should wait until we've controlled infectious disease
• Screening and treating patients is the the most cost effective
  way to go
How best to respond?
How best to respond?


                       •   “We need a whole
                           of government and
                           a whole of society
                           response”
                       •   Margaret
                           Chan, director
                           general, WHO
Need for a broad strategy

                  Comprehensive and
                    integrated action is
                    the means to prevent
                    and control chronic
                    diseases
Difficult questions

•   What is the best level at which to intervene? Social
    determinants? Behavioural risk factors? Biological risk factors?
    Treatment? Or rather how much to intervene at each level?
•   What are the best buys?
•   What should be the priorities?
•   What MUST be done?
•   What is the best system of governance?
•   What to do if very few (even no) resources are available?
•   What to do in this particular country?
•   How to think about these difficult questions at the same time?
Some preliminary answers to some
       of the questions?
What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much
to intervene at each level?

•    Social determinants?
      –     Acting at this level may bring benefits beyond NCDs—for
            example, on poverty, trade, agriculture, education
      –     Some cannot be controlled—ageing of the population,
            globalisation
•    Behavioural risk factors?
      –    We have strong evidence on how to act on some of
           these—for example, raising taxes on tobacco and alcohol,
           banning smoking in public places
      –    Can be very cost effective
      –    Interventions on diet and physical activity are more
           complicated, but there are some relatively simple ones—
           like banning trans fats, reducing salt in food
What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much
to intervene at each level?

•    Biological risk factors?
       –    Later in the disease process than acting on behavioural risk
            factors, less cost effective
       –    How much can the health system achieve alone?
       –    Strengthening the health system helps patients with other
            problems, counteracting to some extent the criticism aimed at
            “vertical systems”
       –    Strong evidence on the benefits of treating cardiovascular risk,
            but depends on some sort of health system and tends to work
            poorly even where there are well functioning health systems
            (rule of halves)
       –    Poor effectiveness on obesity
       –    Good evidence on prediabetes and prehypertension (doesn't
            depend on doctors and nurses)
•What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much
to intervene at each level?

•       Treatment?
    –      The major cost of developed world systems (over 90%)
    –      Least cost effective
    –      Hard to change once you have it, huge vested interest
    –      Hard even to reshape existing systems—stronger primary
           care, less dependency on doctors, fewer hospitals, closer
           links with social services, more disease management,
           stronger palliative care, etc
    –      But people expect “the sick to be treated”
    –      Health systems are traditionally concerned with the sick not
           the “healthy” Could it be different?
Best buys for reducing the burden of NCDs (WHO):
(none of them depend on health systems)

•   Protecting people from tobacco smoke and banning smoking in public places
•   Warning about the dangers of tobacco use
•   Enforcing bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship
•   Raising taxes on tobacco
•   Restricting access to retailed alcohol
•   Enforcing bans on alcohol advertising
•   Raising taxes on alcohol
•   Reduce salt intake and salt content of food
•   Replacing transfat in food with polyunstaurated fat
•   Promoting public awareness about diet and physical activity, including through mass
    media
Interesting question




   What might an entirely new system for
  preventing and controlling NCDs in a low
         income country look like?
It’s a more complicated problem than countering
infectious disease
acute childhood infections maternal     chronic, life long infectious and non-
   deaths                                  infectious diseases


Simple technologies                     Complex interventions


Rapid impact                            Decades before impacts


Controlled by health services           Main levers outside health service
                                           control


Within the remit of the health campus   Takes a whole university and all
   and the health department               government!
View from Scotland on best way to look after people
with long term conditions
Best system for responding to NCDs in LMIC

•   High level task force that is whole of government and
    whole of society
•   Emphasis on public health and prevention with an
    emphasis on structural changes
•   Patients TRULY in charge
•   Extensive use of community health workers
•   Extensive standardisation and use of protocols
•   Emphasis on primary care
•   Few hospitals and specialists—to avoid capture of
    resources
11 UnitedHealth and NHLBI Collaborating Centres of Excellence to
counter chronic disease
Outcomes proposed by UnitedHealth NHLBI Centers of
Excellence

• A strong commitment to action by the UN and member states with
  global and national plans for action
• Creation of a global partnership with all groups able to join, clear
  governance, and a global plan with with targets and regular reporting
• Energetic implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco
  Control
• Action on other risk factors
• Universal access to essential drugs and technology
• Strengthening of health systems (benefits all patients)
• Emphasis on research, particularly implementation research
What are the “must dos” in the many
countries that are currently doing very
                 little?
What MUST be done?


•   National plan
•   “Infrastructure”--government apparatus
•   Surveillance
•   Advocacy
•   Implement Framework Convention on Tobacco
    Control (not all countries have signed)
Conclusion

•   NCDs present a major challenge to health, particularly in the developing
    world
•   Problem will get rapidly worse without action
•   So far very few resources devoted to NCDs
•   There is now high level commitment, but public consciousness of the
    problem needs raising
•   The response must be “all of government and all of society”
•   It is possible to prevent most premature deaths from NCDs
•   There are many cost effective interventions, most of them outside the
    health system
•   We need a global plan (with targets) and national plans. They are
    coming.

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Introduction: Richard Smith

  • 1. Non- communicable disease and mental health in low and middle income countries Richard Smith Director, UnitedHealth Chronic Disease Initiative
  • 2. Agenda • Definitions • The UN meeting • Scale of the problem • Causes • How best to respond (concentrating on NCDs)? • What must be done?
  • 3. Non-communicable disease • WHO defines non-communicable disease (NCD) as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, and certain cancers. • All of these have in common that they are caused predominantly by smoking, poor diet, physical inactivity, and the harmful use of alcohol. • Doesn't include mental health and many other chronic conditions Source: World Health Organization, 2005
  • 4. In September 2011 the UN held a high level meeting on NCDs (did not include mental health) • Only the second high level meeting of the UN on health • The first in 2001 led to the Global Fund for AIDS, TB, and malaria • Led to a flurry of activity and a raising of consciousness (although not among ordinary people) • 130 countries spoke; 200 civil society representatives attended; 40 side meetings • Russia committed $60m and Australia $3.9m
  • 5. Future commitments with target dates • 2012: work with WHO and all stakeholders to set targets • 2013: review of the MDGs; integrate NCDs • 2014: UN review of progress
  • 6. What was achieved? • On global agenda • Meeting was a step change • Understanding that a response must go well beyond health sector • “Whole of society, whole of government” • Development issue • Civil society movement important • Beginning not the end
  • 7. What didn't happen • Nothing on mental health. Should there be another high level meeting? • No new funding apart from Russia and Australia, didn't expect it • WHO costing report and WEF report came too late, some best buys got lost • NCD Alliance has issues with best buys—major omissions • Alcohol weak • No champion countries—Australia, Norway • China and India not very visible; too few G8 champions • Not many LMIC stepping forward • Yet to engage the public—must do by 2014
  • 9. Global Causes of Death (2006) Chronic diseases: Infectious diseases: HIV/AIDS 4.9% Heart disease Tuberculosis 2.4% 30.2% Malaria 1.5% Total: Other Infectious 58.0M Diseases 20.9% Cancer 15.7% Injuries 9.3% The total number of people Diabetes dying from chronic diseases is 1.9% double that of all infectious Other chronic diseases diseases including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria 15.7% (Nature, 2007).
  • 10. Leading Causes of Mortality and Burden of Disease world, 2004 Mortality DALYs % % 1. Ischaemic heart disease 12.2 1. Lower respiratory infections 6.2 2. Cerebrovascular disease 9.7 2. Diarrhoeal diseases 4.8 3. Lower respiratory infections 7.1 3. Depression 4.3 4. COPD 5.1 4. Ischaemic heart disease 4.1 5. Diarrhoeal diseases 3.7 5. HIV/AIDS 3.8 6. HIV/AIDS 3.5 6. Cerebrovascular disease 3.1 7. Tuberculosis 2.5 7. Prematurity, low birth weight 2.9 8. Trachea, bronchus, lung cancers 2.3 8. Birth asphyxia, birth trauma 2.7 9. Road traffic accidents 2.2 9. Road traffic accidents 2.7 10. Prematurity, low birth weight 2.0 10. Neonatal infections and other 2.7 10
  • 11. Burden of disease by broad cause group and region, 2004 11
  • 12. Age-standardized DALYs for noncommunicable diseases by major cause group, sex and country income group, 2004 12
  • 13. Deaths from chronic disease are displacing deaths from infectious disease even in rural Bangladesh
  • 14. Shifting Patterns of Global Health Deaths, % of Total, 2005 Forecast Deaths, 2006- Total 2015, % Change Deaths, M 13.7 Low 12.3 2.5 Lower-middle 13.2 0.5 Upper-middle 2.7 0.5 High 7.1 0 20 40 60 80 100 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 Infectious diseases Chronic diseases
  • 15.
  • 16. Ten leading causes of burden of disease, world, 2004 and 2030 16
  • 18. Leading causes of attributable global mortality and burden of disease, 2004 Attributable Mortality Attributable DALYs % % 1. High blood pressure 12.8 1. Childhood underweight 5.9 2. Tobacco use 8.7 2. Unsafe sex 4.6 3. High blood glucose 5.8 3. Alcohol use 4.5 4. Physical inactivity 5.5 4. Unsafe water, sanitation, hygiene 4.2 5. Overweight and obesity 4.8 5. High blood pressure 3.7 6. High cholesterol 4.5 6. Tobacco use 3.7 7. Unsafe sex 4.0 7. Suboptimal breastfeeding 2.9 8. Alcohol use 3.8 8. High blood glucose 2.7 9. Childhood underweight 3.8 9. Indoor smoke from solid fuels 2.7 10. Indoor smoke from solid fuels 3.3 10. Overweight and obesity 2.3 59 million total global deaths in 2004 1.5 billion total global DALYs in 2004 18
  • 19. Deaths attributed to 19 leading factors, by country income level, 2004 19
  • 20. We can make a difference: death rates in the US, 1900-1996 Decline
  • 21. Yet only 3% of global health aid ($21 billion) goes to NCDs and mental health.
  • 22. Pervasive myths that have prevented action • Global economic development will improve all health conditions • Chronic disease results from freely adopted risk • Chronic diseases are diseases of the elderly • Chronic diseases are diseases of the rich • Benefits of countering chronic disease accrue only to the individual • We can fix chronic disease as we are fixing infectious disease • We should wait until we've controlled infectious disease • Screening and treating patients is the the most cost effective way to go
  • 23. How best to respond?
  • 24. How best to respond? • “We need a whole of government and a whole of society response” • Margaret Chan, director general, WHO
  • 25. Need for a broad strategy Comprehensive and integrated action is the means to prevent and control chronic diseases
  • 26. Difficult questions • What is the best level at which to intervene? Social determinants? Behavioural risk factors? Biological risk factors? Treatment? Or rather how much to intervene at each level? • What are the best buys? • What should be the priorities? • What MUST be done? • What is the best system of governance? • What to do if very few (even no) resources are available? • What to do in this particular country? • How to think about these difficult questions at the same time?
  • 27. Some preliminary answers to some of the questions?
  • 28. What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much to intervene at each level? • Social determinants? – Acting at this level may bring benefits beyond NCDs—for example, on poverty, trade, agriculture, education – Some cannot be controlled—ageing of the population, globalisation • Behavioural risk factors? – We have strong evidence on how to act on some of these—for example, raising taxes on tobacco and alcohol, banning smoking in public places – Can be very cost effective – Interventions on diet and physical activity are more complicated, but there are some relatively simple ones— like banning trans fats, reducing salt in food
  • 29. What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much to intervene at each level? • Biological risk factors? – Later in the disease process than acting on behavioural risk factors, less cost effective – How much can the health system achieve alone? – Strengthening the health system helps patients with other problems, counteracting to some extent the criticism aimed at “vertical systems” – Strong evidence on the benefits of treating cardiovascular risk, but depends on some sort of health system and tends to work poorly even where there are well functioning health systems (rule of halves) – Poor effectiveness on obesity – Good evidence on prediabetes and prehypertension (doesn't depend on doctors and nurses)
  • 30. •What is the best level at which to intervene? Or rather how much to intervene at each level? • Treatment? – The major cost of developed world systems (over 90%) – Least cost effective – Hard to change once you have it, huge vested interest – Hard even to reshape existing systems—stronger primary care, less dependency on doctors, fewer hospitals, closer links with social services, more disease management, stronger palliative care, etc – But people expect “the sick to be treated” – Health systems are traditionally concerned with the sick not the “healthy” Could it be different?
  • 31. Best buys for reducing the burden of NCDs (WHO): (none of them depend on health systems) • Protecting people from tobacco smoke and banning smoking in public places • Warning about the dangers of tobacco use • Enforcing bans on tobacco advertising, promotion and sponsorship • Raising taxes on tobacco • Restricting access to retailed alcohol • Enforcing bans on alcohol advertising • Raising taxes on alcohol • Reduce salt intake and salt content of food • Replacing transfat in food with polyunstaurated fat • Promoting public awareness about diet and physical activity, including through mass media
  • 32. Interesting question What might an entirely new system for preventing and controlling NCDs in a low income country look like?
  • 33. It’s a more complicated problem than countering infectious disease acute childhood infections maternal chronic, life long infectious and non- deaths infectious diseases Simple technologies Complex interventions Rapid impact Decades before impacts Controlled by health services Main levers outside health service control Within the remit of the health campus Takes a whole university and all and the health department government!
  • 34. View from Scotland on best way to look after people with long term conditions
  • 35. Best system for responding to NCDs in LMIC • High level task force that is whole of government and whole of society • Emphasis on public health and prevention with an emphasis on structural changes • Patients TRULY in charge • Extensive use of community health workers • Extensive standardisation and use of protocols • Emphasis on primary care • Few hospitals and specialists—to avoid capture of resources
  • 36. 11 UnitedHealth and NHLBI Collaborating Centres of Excellence to counter chronic disease
  • 37. Outcomes proposed by UnitedHealth NHLBI Centers of Excellence • A strong commitment to action by the UN and member states with global and national plans for action • Creation of a global partnership with all groups able to join, clear governance, and a global plan with with targets and regular reporting • Energetic implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control • Action on other risk factors • Universal access to essential drugs and technology • Strengthening of health systems (benefits all patients) • Emphasis on research, particularly implementation research
  • 38. What are the “must dos” in the many countries that are currently doing very little?
  • 39. What MUST be done? • National plan • “Infrastructure”--government apparatus • Surveillance • Advocacy • Implement Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (not all countries have signed)
  • 40. Conclusion • NCDs present a major challenge to health, particularly in the developing world • Problem will get rapidly worse without action • So far very few resources devoted to NCDs • There is now high level commitment, but public consciousness of the problem needs raising • The response must be “all of government and all of society” • It is possible to prevent most premature deaths from NCDs • There are many cost effective interventions, most of them outside the health system • We need a global plan (with targets) and national plans. They are coming.