Five Health Risks Hold Key to Longer Life
New York, Oct 27 2009 4:10PM
Addressing five critical risk factors – underweight childhood, unsafe sex, alcohol use, lack of safe water, sanitation and hygiene, and high blood pressure – could add almost five years to global life expectancy, according to a new United Nations (http://www.who.int/healthinfo/global_burden_disease/global_health_risks/en/index.html) report.
These five factors are responsible for one
quarter of the 60 million deaths estimated to occur
annually, said the UN World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/en/),
which published “Global Health Risks.”
A
health risk is defined in the report as “a factor that
raises the probability of adverse health outcomes.” It
looked at 24 of them which are a mixture of environmental,
behavioural and physiological factors – such as air
pollution, tobacco use and poor nutrition – and estimated
their effects on deaths, diseases and injuries by region,
age, sex and country income for the year 2004.
The
report also pointed to the combined effect of multiple risk
factors, noting that many deaths and diseases are caused by
more than one risk factor and may be prevented by reducing
any of the risk factors responsible for them.
For
example, eight risk factors alone account for over 75 per
cent of cases of coronary heart disease, the leading cause
of deaths worldwide.
These are alcohol consumption,
high blood glucose, tobacco use, high blood pressure, high
body mass index, high cholesterol, low fruit and vegetable
intake and physical inactivity. WHO added that most of these
deaths occur in developing countries.
“Understanding
the relative importance of health risk factors helps
governments to figure out which health policies they want to
pursue,” (http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2009/health_risks_report_20091027/en/index.html)
said Colin Mathers, Coordinator for Mortality and Burden of
Disease at WHO.
“In many countries there is a
complex mix of risk factors,” he added. “Countries can
combine this type of evidence along with information about
policies and their costs to decide how to set their health
agenda.”
The report also found, among others, that
more than a third of the global child deaths can be
attributed to a few nutritional risk factors such as
underweight childhood, inadequate breastfeeding and zinc
deficiency. Also, unhealthy and unsafe environments cause
one in four child deaths worldwide.
In addition, 71
per cent of lung cancer deaths are caused by tobacco
smoking, while obesity and being overweight causes more
deaths worldwide than being
underweight.
ENDS