Effectively managing NCDs critical for Sri Lanka
A World Bank report warns that demographic transition is well under
way in Sri Lanka and that the country faces escalating healthcare costs
with rising rates of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as heart
disease, diabetes, cancer and asthma, as well as their risk factors such
as obesity, smoking, high sugar - salt diets and alcoholism.
Improving lifestyles and reducing risk factors while concurrently
improving the quality of health services will promote healthier aging
and reduce the impact of NCDs on Sri Lanka's development.
Sri Lanka needs a healthy and productive population to sustain its
transition to a Middle Income Country, which will be challenged by two
other transitions that are already under way, namely the rapid aging of
the population and the increasing burden of NCDs.
Effectively managing the latter transitions will be a critical
prerequisite for the former, said World Bank Country Director for Sri
Lanka and the Maldives Diaretou Gaye.
According to report No. 8213 - Prevention and Control of Selected
Non-Communicable Diseases in Sri Lanka, NCDs have become the largest
contributor accounting for 85 percent of illhealth, disability and early
death. A South Asia regional study found that South Asians suffer their
first heart attacks six years earlier than others worldwide.
This burden of NCDs will rise in the future, in part, due to further
aging of the population with the doubling of the population over the age
of 65 from 12.1 percent to 24.4 percent over the next thirty years.
While life expectancy for women has made steady gains since 1920, it has
stalled for men since 1980 due to risk factors such as smoking and
excessive drinking and delays in seeking healthcare.
The burdens of NCDs are also shifting towards the poor who, after
heart attacks or chronic lung diseases including asthma, face life-long
major illnesses, and then find themselves caught in a poverty trap when
they can get better and they can work, says co-author Michael Engelgau,
a World Bank Senior Public Health Specialist on secondment from the U.S.
Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.
Aging and shifting disease patterns
The report says that with average life expectancy in Sri Lanka now at
74 years and rising, and increasing urbanisation and accompanying
lifestyle changes, people are increasingly exposed to risk factors for
NCDs. People have become more sedentary, consumption of alcohol and
cigarettes has increased, and diets have become less healthy. As a
result, Sri Lankans are becoming more vulnerable to NCDs, creating
significant new pressures on the health system to treat and care for
them.
Reducing risk factors as tobacco use and excessive alcohol
consumption along with an active lifestyle and improved diet will go a
long way towards healthy aging.
Importantly, this work highlights the cost-effective policy and
health system interventions which if prioritised now, can help mitigate
the longer term financial impact of NCDs, says Julie Mclaughlin, World
Bank South Asia's Health Manager.
Given the relatively low health spending of 4 percent of GDP in 2008,
NCD care in Sri Lanka is increasingly financed by out of pocket spending
by the public.
World Bank's Director for Human Development in South Asia, Michal
Rutkowski says, Tackling NCDs in South Asia early on with better
prevention and treatment would significantly spare poor people the
crushing burden of poor health, lost earnings, deepening poverty and the
risk of disability and premature death.
Options for better managing NCDs
The report encourages Sri Lanka to adopt a number of population based
and individual patient based approaches to reduce unhealthy behaviour in
the general population and control heart disease, diabetes, cancers and
other NCDs.
These efforts, such as more effective legislation on the use of
transfats and tobacco as well as public education to reduce salt intake
would help delay the onset of these diseases.
At the clinic level, aspirin and beta-blockers for high risk
individuals could reduce the chances of cardiovascular diseases.
|