del Pilar Camargo Plazas Maria
University of Alberta, 7-80 University Terrace, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2T4, Canada.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci. 2009 Apr-Jun;32(2):E30-41. doi: 10.1097/ANS.0b013e3181a3b354.
Until recently, infectious diseases were the main cause of death worldwide. New medical discoveries and the evolution of public health improved life expectancy and the ability to survive acute threats, thus changing the course of diseases from acute to chronic. Today, chronic illness is the most important health concern worldwide. Chronic illness increases existing poverty and pushes other people into it. As nurses, members of the healthcare system and members of this world, we cannot forget that our response toward globalization and chronic disease has to be centered in leadership through reorienting local and national healthcare systems. All actions must be grounded in the ethical treatment of the ill; we cannot close our eyes in hospitals or communities to what is happening now worldwide because our responsibility is to promote health, prevent disease, and care for human beings.