The World Ignores Non-communicable Diseases
In September 2000 the UN drafted a set of goals, labeled the Millennium Development Goals (MDG), to be accomplished by and large in the developing world by 2015, with the help of the West. The MDG provides a series of concrete benchmarks for improving rights, education, infrastructure, equality, and gender rights within the developing world. The Eight MDGs Include
- Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger.
- Achieve universal primary education.
- Promote gender equality ad empower women.
- Reduce child mortality. Improve maternal health.
- Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.
- Ensure environmental sustainability.
- Develop a global partnership for development
This is a great idea right? Having a set of concrete benchmarks will provide necessary evaluative tools for assessing affective governance. But the MDGs have a serious misgiving: the UN MDG, and therefore Ghana's own development agenda in turn, say nothing about non-communicable diseases (NCDs).
The NCDs are those that come from lifestyle: diet exercise, genes. Hypertension, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, the MDG ignores all of them. It's hard for me to explain why the UNDP decided to do this. 3.2% of the population of Ghana is infected with HIV. Hypertension by contrast affects 28.7% of the population. We're on our own when we take control of our health. They have created a framework that makes it hard to fight NCDs. You, you yourself, and no one else, needs to take control to stay healthy. Exercise. Eat healthy foods. Get screened so that you know your sugar level, your cholesterol, and your blood pressure. Stay informed. Need help? Contact us at the Longevity Project, we're here to support you to fight NCDs, as an agency we have very few peers.
Labels: development, diet, disease, excercise, healthy lifestyle



