Symptom and prevention of different non communicable disease..
please tell this with explanation about 50 words..
Answers
Tools by targets
Target 1: Reduce mortality from NCDs.
Target 2: Reduce harmful use of alcohol.
Target 3: Reduce prevalence of physical inactivity.
Target 4: Reduce salt intake.
Target 5: Reduce tobacco use.
Target 6: Reduce prevalence of raised blood pressure.
Target 7: Halt the rise in diabetes and obesity.
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Home/Activities/Preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases
Preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases
Preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases
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Overview
Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) impose a significant burden on health and development in the Western Pacific Region. NCDs are the leading causes of death and disability in the Region. WHO Western Pacific Regional Office supports Member States in the prevention and control of NCDs to:
Raise priority accorded to NCDs through international cooperation and advocacy.
Strengthen national capacity, governance, multisectoral action, and partnerships.
Reduce the major modifiable risk factors, such as tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol, unhealthy diets, and physical inactivity.
Develop and implement effective legal frameworks.
Orient health systems through people-centred health care and universal health coverage.
Promote high-quality research and development.
Monitor trends, determinants and progress to achieve global, regional and national targets through evidence-based interventions.
The Regional Office’s work is guided by the Western Pacific Regional Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs (2014-2020), the Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs (2013-2020), and the regional commitments of Member States. The regional action plan recognizes that many of the most effective actions necessary to tackle the NCD burden lie outside the health sector. Policies in sectors responsible for education, trade, food, alcohol and urban development need to be as much part of the action on NCDs as the responses from the health sector. A health-in-all-policies approach will increasingly play an important role in rendering visibility to the need for dialogue and consensus on the impact of policies on health in general and the NCD epidemic in particular.