Tribhuvan University, Institute of Medicine, Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery,Maharajgunj, Kathmandu. and Kathmandu Institute of Child Health, Budhanilkantha, Kathmandu.
Tribhuvan University Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Central Department of Economics, Kritipur, Kathmandu.
Kathmandu Univ Med J (KUMJ). 2022 Jul-Sep;20(79):376-383.
We aimed to assess the burden of NCDIs across socioeconomic groups, their economic impact, existing health service readiness and availability, current policy frameworks and national investment, and planned programmatic initiatives in Nepal through a comprehensive literature review. Secondary data from Global Burden of Disease estimates from GBD 2015 and National Living Standard Survey 2011 were used to estimate the burden of NCDI and present the relationship of NCDI burden with socioeconomic status. The Commission used these data to define priority NCDI conditions and recommend potential cost-effective, poverty-averting, and equity-promoting health system interventions. NCDIs disproportionately affect the health and well-being of poorer populations in Nepal and cause significant impoverishment. The Commission found a high diversity of NCDIs in Nepal, with approximately 60% of the morbidity and mortality caused by NCDIs without primary quantified behavioral or metabolic risk factors, and nearly half of all NCDI-related DALYs occurring in Nepalese younger than 40 years. The Commission prioritized an expanded set of twenty-five NCDI conditions and recommended introduction or scale-up of twenty-three evidence-based health sector interventions. Implementation of these interventions would avert an estimated 9680 premature deaths per annum by 2030 and would cost approximately $8.76 per capita. The Commission modelled potential financing mechanisms, including increased excise taxation on tobacco, alcohol, and sugar-sweetened beverages, which would provide significant revenue for NCDI-related expenditures. Overall, the Commission's conclusions are expected to be a valuable contribution to equitable NCDI planning in Nepal and similar resource-constrained settings globally.
我们旨在通过全面的文献回顾,评估尼泊尔不同社会经济群体的非传染性疾病负担、经济影响、现有卫生服务准备情况和可及性、现行政策框架和国家投资,以及计划中的方案举措。利用全球疾病负担估计中的全球疾病负担 2015 年数据和 2011 年国家生活标准调查中的二级数据来估算非传染性疾病的负担,并展示非传染性疾病负担与社会经济地位之间的关系。该委员会利用这些数据来确定优先非传染性疾病,并建议潜在的具有成本效益、扶贫和促进公平的卫生系统干预措施。非传染性疾病不成比例地影响尼泊尔较贫穷人口的健康和福祉,并导致严重贫困。该委员会发现尼泊尔的非传染性疾病种类繁多,大约 60%的发病率和死亡率是非传染性疾病引起的,没有初级量化的行为或代谢风险因素,而且近一半的所有非传染性疾病相关的伤残调整生命年发生在尼泊尔 40 岁以下的人群中。该委员会确定了一整套 25 种非传染性疾病,并建议引入或扩大 23 种基于证据的卫生部门干预措施。实施这些干预措施,预计到 2030 年每年可避免约 9680 人过早死亡,人均成本约为 8.76 美元。该委员会对潜在的融资机制进行了建模,包括对烟草、酒精和含糖饮料征收更高的消费税,这将为与非传染性疾病相关的支出提供大量收入。总的来说,委员会的结论预计将为尼泊尔和全球类似资源有限的环境中的公平性非传染性疾病规划做出有价值的贡献。