Globalization and the Burden of Disease

C. Weiss
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Abstract

More equitable and need-oriented funding of health services and research would safeguard everyone’s health. Worldwide health expenditures on health disproportionately address problems of the well-off, while research on diseases like malaria affecting hundreds of millions of mostly low-income people are underfunded. Nor are sufficient resources devoted to mental illness, traffic injuries, and natural disasters. As people in low-income countries live longer, chronic, non-communicable, and lifestyle diseases add to long-standing burdens of infectious and parasitic disease, and maternal and child health. This epidemiological transition calls for universal access to health services, which will also improve these countries’ ability to detect and respond to infectious diseases like the COVID-19 pandemic. The World Health Organization, coordinator of global epidemic response, needs to be freed from its downward spiral of decreased effectiveness, frozen funding, and increased politicization. Statistics on global causes of death and disability elevate the importance of social determinants of health.
全球化与疾病负担
更加公平和面向需求的卫生服务和研究供资将保障每个人的健康。世界范围内的卫生支出不成比例地解决了富裕人群的问题,而对影响数亿人(主要是低收入人群)的疟疾等疾病的研究却资金不足。也没有足够的资源用于精神疾病、交通伤害和自然灾害。随着低收入国家人民寿命的延长,慢性病、非传染性疾病和生活方式疾病加重了长期存在的传染病和寄生虫病以及孕产妇和儿童健康负担。这一流行病学转变要求普及卫生服务,这也将提高这些国家发现和应对COVID-19大流行等传染病的能力。作为全球流行病应对协调者的世界卫生组织需要摆脱其效率下降、资金冻结和政治化加剧的恶性循环。关于全球死亡和残疾原因的统计数据提高了健康的社会决定因素的重要性。
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