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构建国际贸易与慢性疾病的关系

Framing international trade and chronic disease.

机构信息

Institute of Population Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.

出版信息

Global Health. 2011 Jul 4;7:21. doi: 10.1186/1744-8603-7-21.

Abstract

There is an emerging evidence base that global trade is linked with the rise of chronic disease in many low and middle-income countries (LMICs). This linkage is associated, in part, with the global diffusion of unhealthy lifestyles and health damaging products posing a particular challenge to countries still facing high burdens of communicable disease. We developed a generic framework which depicts the determinants and pathways connecting global trade with chronic disease. We then applied this framework to three key risk factors for chronic disease: unhealthy diets, alcohol, and tobacco. This led to specific 'product pathways', which can be further refined and used by health policy-makers to engage with their country's trade policy-makers around health impacts of ongoing trade treaty negotiations, and by researchers to continue refining an evidence base on how global trade is affecting patterns of chronic disease. The prevention and treatment of chronic diseases is now rising on global policy agendas, highlighted by the UN Summit on Noncommunicable Diseases (September 2011). Briefs and declarations leading up to this Summit reference the role of globalization and trade in the spread of risk factors for these diseases, but emphasis is placed on interventions to change health behaviours and on voluntary corporate responsibility. The findings summarized in this article imply the need for a more concerted approach to regulate trade-related risk factors and thus more engagement between health and trade policy sectors within and between nations. An explicit recognition of the role of trade policies in the spread of noncommunicable disease risk factors should be a minimum outcome of the September 2011 Summit, with a commitment to ensure that future trade treaties do not increase such risks.

摘要

有越来越多的证据表明,全球贸易与许多中低收入国家(LMICs)慢性疾病的增加有关。这种联系部分与不健康的生活方式和对健康有害的产品在全球范围内扩散有关,这些产品对仍面临传染病负担沉重的国家构成了特别挑战。我们开发了一个通用框架,描述了将全球贸易与慢性疾病联系起来的决定因素和途径。然后,我们将该框架应用于慢性疾病的三个关键风险因素:不健康饮食、酒精和烟草。这导致了特定的“产品途径”,可以由卫生政策制定者进一步细化和使用,以围绕正在进行的贸易条约谈判对其国家贸易政策制定者的健康影响进行接触,并由研究人员继续完善关于全球贸易如何影响慢性疾病模式的证据基础。慢性疾病的预防和治疗现在正在全球政策议程中上升,联合国非传染性疾病问题高级别会议(2011 年 9 月)强调了这一点。在此峰会之前的简报和宣言都提到了全球化和贸易在这些疾病危险因素传播中的作用,但重点是改变健康行为的干预措施和自愿的企业责任。本文总结的研究结果表明,需要采取更协调的方法来监管与贸易相关的危险因素,从而在国家内部和国家之间加强卫生和贸易政策部门之间的联系。贸易政策在传播非传染性疾病危险因素方面的作用应成为 2011 年 9 月峰会的最低成果之一,并承诺确保未来的贸易条约不会增加此类风险。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/87dc/3158109/bac1548e3ef0/1744-8603-7-21-1.jpg

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