Health Ministers from WHO’s South-East Asia Region adopted the ‘New Delhi Declaration on High Blood Pressure’ as a part of their commitment towards prevention and control of high blood pressure and to strive towards measurable reduction in the prevalence of hypertension in the region by 2025.
India hosted the 31st meeting of Ministers of Health of the WHO South-East Asia region. The Ministers reviewed progress on decisions and recommendations from previous meetings of Ministers of Health.
The New Delhi Declaration on High Blood Pressure was adopted by the Health Ministers in recognition of the fact that while noncommunicable diseases account for 55 per cent of the 14.5 million total deaths in the region; cardiovascular diseases alone account for 25 per cent of all deaths (3.6 million). The Ministers voiced their concern that delays in diagnosis and limited access to treatment can have catastrophic consequences for the poor.
“High blood pressure is a strong and reliable warning signal that health is at risk and that something needs to be done. But it often shows no symptoms for years and by the time symptoms appear, cardiovascular disease is advanced and the risk of heart attack or a stroke is increased” said WHO Director General, Dr Margaret Chan. “The public health challenge is to get more people routinely tested early to enable proper management of high blood pressure through lifestyle change or medication” she added.
India’s Minister for Health and Family Welfare Ghulam Nabi Azad highlighted that India is soon to be certified as a polio free country. He acknowledged WHO’s undivided support to the Government’s strong political will and leadership at the highest levels. “India is called the ‘pharmacy of the world’ for producing high quality and affordable generic drugs which have substantially brought down the prices,” he said. “India also has several institutions that excel in public health and are open to neighbouring countries in the area of capacity building aimed at increasing skilled human resources in health”
“We have developed indigenous vaccines and testing reagents for H1N1 and other influenzas; indigenous vaccine for Japanese Encephalitis and a magnifying device for cervical cancer screening in the field,” he added.
Through the New Delhi Declaration, ministers committed to:
- Multisectoral collaboration with key stakeholders and to empower people to make healthy choices for healthy lives; develop multisectoral policies to promote physical activity and healthy diet and eliminate exposure to tobacco and harmful use of alcohol;
- Implement salt reduction strategies, regulate the food industry including food labeling, and reduction of salt in processed foods;
- Legislate for 100 per cent tobacco smoke-free settings;
- Promote universal access to prevention, treatment and care for the integrated management of noncommunicable diseases including hypertension, through a primary healthcare approach.
- From September 11 to 13, delegations from eleven South-East Asian countries will meet at WHO’s Regional Office for the 66th session of the WHO Regional Committee.
EP News Bureau – Mumbai