To improve cardiovascular health in cities, sectors need ... · To improve cardiovascular health in...
Transcript of To improve cardiovascular health in cities, sectors need ... · To improve cardiovascular health in...
To improve cardiovascular health in cities, sectors need to work together.
Better Hearts Better Cities seeks to improve the control of hypertension as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease in low-income urban communities by using a multisector, multidisciplinary approach.
LOCALGOVERNMENTS
FOOD SUPPLIERS
SOCIALENTERPRISES
DIGITAL AND TELECOMMUNICATION ORGANIZATIONS
INSURANCE FUNDS
EMPLOYERS
CIVIL SOCIETIES
Better Hearts Better Cities will take a multisector, multidisciplinary approach to address hypertension and its risk factors by: Strengthening health systems and innovating care provision Encouraging physical exercise through smart city design and urban planning Creating a healthy food environment for the city populations Establishing policies to encourage smoking cessation and reduce
alcohol consumption Improving air quality and addressing other environmental factors
Around the world, rapid urbanization has changed how low-income urban communities are impacted by disease. Over 50% of the world’s population now lives in urban areas1
People living in cities increasingly lead lifestyles characterized by unhealthy nutrition, reduced physical activity, stress, and
excessive alcohol and tobacco consumption: all risk factors for cardiovascular disease
80% of cardiovascular deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries2
Hypertension is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease and disproportionately affects low-income urban communities
Hypertension is poorly controlled in low-income urban communities
Better Hearts Better Cities
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Website www.novartisfoundation.orgTwitter @NovartisFDNYouTube youtube.com/novartisfoundationLinkedIn linkedin.com/company/novartis-foundation
The Novartis Foundation is a philanthropic organization which strives to have sustainable impact on the health of low-income communities through a combination of programmatic work, health outcomes research, and its translation into policy to address global health challenges.
USA3
Mongolia4
Senegal5
1 World Health Organization. Global Report on Urban Health. http://www.who.int/kobe_centre/measuring/urban-global-report/ugr_summary.pdf?ua=1 Accessed April 2017.2 �E.�Bloom,�E.T.�Cafiero,�E.�Jané-Llopis,�et�al.�The�Global�Economic�Burden�of�Noncommunicable�Diseases�World�Economic�Forum,�Geneva,�Switzerland�(2011)3 ��Joffres�M,�Falaschetti�E,�Gillespie�C,�et�al.�Hypertension�prevalence,�awareness,�treatment�and�control�in�national�surveys�from�England,�the�USA�and�Canada,�and�correlation�with�stroke�and�ischaemic�heart�disease�mortality:�a�cross-sectional�study. �BMJ�Open�2013;3:e003423.�doi:�10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003423
4 WHO�STEPS�survey,�Mongolia �20135 WHO STEPS survey, Senegal 2015
Initially, Better Hearts Better Cities will demonstrate the approach in Ulaanbaatar�(Mongolia)�and�Dakar�(Senegal).�A�third�city�will�follow in Brazil later in 2017.
Better Hearts Better Cities will initially focus on tackling hypertension, but the ultimate goal is to identify a scalable approach that is replicable in other cities and for other non-communicable diseases.