Pakistan’s Sania Nishtar to head a WHO commission

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NEW YORK: The United Nations health agency has announced the establishment of a high-level global commission on non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which will be led by Pakistan’s Sania Nishtar, to identify innovative ways to curb the world’s biggest causes of death and extend life expectancy for millions of people.

We urgently need new approaches and action on a dramatically different scale if we are to stop people from dying unnecessarily due to non-communicable diseases, said World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a statement. I am committed to engaging the very best people in the world to address our health challenges, he added.

Sania Nishtar, the commission’s chairman, is a prominent global advocate for action against non-communicable diseases, former federal minister of the government of Pakistan and civil society leader. She has also previously served as co-chair of the WHO Commission on Ending Childhood Obesity.

NCDs including cardiovascular disease, cancers, diabetes and respiratory disease, as well as suffering from mental health issues and the impacts of violence and injuries kill about 40 million people globally each year, accounting for 70 per cent of all deaths. About 15 million of those deaths are in people between the ages of 30 and 69. Low and middle-income countries account for more than 80 per cent of all deaths from NCDs.

In 2015, world leaders committed to reduce premature deaths from the diseases by one third by 2030, as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Recent WHO reports indicate that the world will struggle to meet that target.

Later this month, ministers and other health leaders from around the world will review progress on this target at the WHO Global Conference on Non-communicable Diseases in Montevideo, Uruguay.

Governments and other stakeholders will meet again at the third United Nations High-level meeting on non-communicable diseases in 2018.