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New WMA President urges global action to fight lifestyle diseases
A plea to governments of the world to work with physicians to
combat the epidemic of lifestyle diseases before it becomes uncontrollable,
has been made by Dr Nachiappan Arumugam, the new President of
the World Medical Association.
In his inaugural address at the WMAs annual General Assembly
in Sun City, South Africa, Dr Arumugam, a cardiologist from Malaysia,
said governments were not doing enough, either because they did
not recognise the enormity of the problem or because they were
reluctant to face reality. But now it was time for global action.
Advocacy for diet modification, encouraging physical activity,
anti-smoking measures and regular medical examination aimed at
early preventive actions may look daunting, but without the immediate
institution of these measures the world will within the next decade
or two face such an enormous problem that it will not be able
to handle.
He said the unparalleled improvement in the health of the worlds
population as a result of the remarkable medical discoveries and
inventions of the last 50 years seemed to have been short lived.
The world again faced new epidemics and challenges.
The health of the population of the world seems more vulnerable
and more hazardous than ever before in recent history. The last
decade has not only seen a resurgence of deadly infections like
AIDS and SARS, but also a chronic serious epidemic commonly termed
as lifestyle diseases.
The number of patients afflicted with obesity, hypertension,
diabetes mellitus, dyslipidaemia and related diseases has been
increasing at an alarming rate the world over This surge in lifestyle
diseases has not been confined to the wealthier and more developed
countries, but has been spreading at an alarming rate in the developing
and poorer countries. This current epidemic, affecting people
in their prime of life, causes untold misery to individuals, families
and countries. The immense drain on the financial resources of
the families and the nations has jeopardised the development of
sustainable heath care systems in many countries.
As life style diseases are chronic in nature and progression
insidious, patients attention to the problem is delayed
and awareness is only drawn to the disease at a late stage making
it complex and expensive to treat.
In many countries lifestyle diseases affects about thirty
percent of the population while in some it affects sixty per cent
of the population and is rising incessantly.
Researchers and pharmaceutical companies are trying to
develop new medicines to control and treat these conditions. Though
new medicines are necessary to treat those already afflicted,
the only sustainable solution in overcoming this epidemic will
be by concerted lifestyle changes and instituting preventive measures.
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