Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T07:50:13.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

3 - Chronic Disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Prabhat Jha
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Rachel Nugent
Affiliation:
University of Washington
Stéphane Verguet
Affiliation:
University of Washington
David Bloom
Affiliation:
Harvard University
Ryan Hum
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Bjørn Lomborg
Affiliation:
Copenhagen Consensus Center
Get access

Summary

Eighty percent of global deaths from heart disease, stroke, cancer, and other chronic diseases occur in low- and middle-income countries. This chapter discusses priorities for control of these chronic diseases as an input into the 2012 Copenhagen Consensus. This chapter and the accompanying Chapter 7 on infectious disease control build on the results of the 2008 Copenhagen Consensus chapter on disease control (Jamison et al., 2008), and is best read as an extension of the latter chapter.

This chapter also draws on the framework and findings of the Disease Control Priorities Project (DCP2). The DCP2 engaged over 350 authors and among its outputs were estimates of the cost-effectiveness of 315 interventions, including about 100 interventions for chronic diseases. These estimates vary a good deal in their thoroughness and in the extent to which they provide regionally-specific estimates of both cost and effectiveness. Taken as a whole, however, they represent a comprehensive canvas of chronic disease control opportunities. This chapter identifies five key priority interventions for chronic disease in developing countries which chiefly address heart attacks, strokes, cancer, and tobacco-related respiratory disease. These interventions are chosen from among many because of their cost-effectiveness, the size of the disease burden they address, their implementation ease, and other criteria. Separate but related 2008 Copenhagen Consensus chapters dealt with other major determinants of chronic diseases such as nutrition, (Behrman et al., 2007), air pollution (Larsen et al., 2008) and education (Orazem et al., 2008). The health-related chapters for the 2012 Copenhagen Consensus focus on infectious diseases (Jamison et al., 2012), sanitation and water (Rijsberman and Zwane, 2012), education (Orazem, 2012), hunger and undernutrition (Hoddinott et al., 2012) and population growth (Kohler, 2012).

Type
Chapter
Information
Global Problems, Smart Solutions
Costs and Benefits
, pp. 137 - 185
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ad Hoc Committee on Health Research Relating to Future Intervention Options, & World Health Organization, 1996: Investing in Health Research and Development: Report of the AD Hoc Committee on Health Research Relating to Future Intervention Options, Convened Under the Auspices of the World Health Organization, Geneva
Asaria, R., Chisholm, D., Mathers, C., Ezzati, M., and Beaghole, R., 2007: Chronic disease prevention: health effects and financial costs of strategies to reduce salt intake and control tobacco use, Lancet 370, 2044–63CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ballard, C., Shoven, J., and Whalley, J., 1985: General equilibrium computations of the marginal welfare costs of taxes in the United States, American Economic Review 74, 128–38Google Scholar
Barnum, H., 1994: The economic burden of the global trade in tobacco, Tobacco Control 3, 358–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Behrman, J. R., Alderman, H., and Hoddinott, J., 2007: Hunger and malnutrition, Paper Prepared for 2008 Copenhagen Consensus
Bertram, M., Steyn, K., Wentzel-Viljoen, E., Tollman, S., and Hofman, K., 2012: Reducing the sodium content of high-salt foods: effect on cardiovascular disease in South Africa, South African Medical Journal 102, 743–5
Blecher, E. H. and van Walbeek, C. P., 2004: An international analysis of cigarette affordability, Tobacco Control 13, 339–46CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bloom, D. E. and Canning, D., 2006: Booms, busts and echoes: how the biggest demographic upheaval in history is affecting global development, Finance and Development 43, 8–13Google Scholar
Bloom, D. E., Canning, D., and Jamison, D. T., 2004: Health, wealth and welfare, Finance and Development, 41, 10–15Google Scholar
Bloom, D. E., Cafiero, E. T., Jané-Llopis, E., Abrahams-Gessel, S., Bloom, L. R., Fathima, S., Feigl, A. B., Gaziano, T., Mowafi, M., Pandya, A., Prettner, K., Rosenberg, L., Seligman, B., Stein, A. Z., and Weinstein, C., 2011a: The Global economic burden of non-communicable diseases, World Economic Forum, Geneva,
Bloom, D. E., Chisholm, D., Jané-Llopis, E., Prettner, K., Stein, A., and Feigl, A., 2011b: From burden to “Best buys”: reducing the economic impact of non-communicable diseases in low- and middle-income countries, World Health Organization and World Economic Forum, Geneva
Brenzel, B., Wolfson, L. J., Fox–Rushby, J., Miller, M., and Halsey, N. A., 2006: Vaccine–preventable diseases, in D. T. Jamison, A. R. Measham, J. B. Bremen et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press New York, 389–412
Carr, S. M. et al., 2011: An evidence synthesis of qualitative and quantitative research on component intervention techniques, effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, equity and acceptability of different versions of health-related lifestyle advisor roles in improving health, Health Technology Assessment 15(9), iii–iv, 1–284CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1997: Unrealized Prevention Opportunities: Reducing the Health and Economic Burden of Chronic Disease CDC, Atlanta, GA
Chaloupka, F. K., Yurekli, A., and Fong, G. T., 2012: Tobacco taxes as a tobacco control strategy, Tobacco Control 21, 172–80CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chen, Z., Yang, G., Zhou, M., Smith, M., Offer, A., Ma, J., Wang, L., Pan, H., Whitlock, G., Collins, R., Niu, S., and Peto, R., 2006: Body mass index and mortality from ischaemic heart disease in a lean population: 10 year prospective study of 220000 adult men, International Journal of Epidemiology 35, 141–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chinese Academy of Preventative Medicine (CAPM), 1997: Smoking in China: 1996 National Prevalence Survey of Smoking Pattern, China Science and Technology Press, BeijingGoogle Scholar
Chodosh, J. et al., 2005: Meta-analysis: chronic disease self-management programs for older adults, Annals of Internal Medicine 143, 427–38CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ciecierski, C., 2003: Tobacco control and economics in Poland, in 12th World Conference on Tobacco or Health: Global Action for a Tobacco Free Future, Helsinki
Coleman, K., Austin, B. T., Brach, C., and Wagner, E. H., 2009: Evidence on the chronic care model in the new millennium, Health Affairs 28, 75–85CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cutler, D., Deaton, A., and Lleras-Muney, A., 2006: The determinants of mortality, Journal of Economic Perspectives 20, 97–120CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daar, A., Singer, P., Persad, D., Pramming, S., Matthews, D., Beaglehole, R., Bernstein, A. et al., 2007: Grand challenges in chronic non-communicable diseases, Nature 450, 494–6CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dikshit, R., Gupta, P., Ramasundarahettige, C., 2012: Cancer mortality in India: a nationally representative survey, Lancet 6736, 60358–4Google Scholar
Doll, R. and Peto, R., 1981: The causes of cancer: quantitative estimates of avoidable risks of cancer in the United States today, Journal of the National Cancer Institute 66, 1191–308CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Doll, R., Peto, R., Boreham, J., and Sutherland, I., 2004: Mortality in relation to smoking: 50 years’ observations on male British doctors, British Medical Journal 328, 1519–28
Dye, C. and Floyd, K., 2006: Tuberculosis, in D. T. Jamison, A. R. Measham, J. B. Breman et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn. Oxford University Press, New York, 289–309
Ezzati, M., Vander Hoorn, S., Lopez, A. D., Ganaei, G., Rodgers, A., Mathers, C. D., and Murray, C. J. L., 2006: Comparative quantification of mortality and burden of disease attributable to selected risk factors, in Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors, Oxford University Press, New York, 241–396Google ScholarPubMed
Forey, B., Hamling, J., and Lee, P., 2009: International Smoking Statistics: A Collection of Historical Data from 30 Economically Developed Countries, Oxford University Press, New York
Gakidou, E., Hogan, M., and Lopez, A. D., 2004: Adult mortality: time for a reappraisal, International Journal of Epidemiology 33, 710–17Google Scholar
Gaziano, T., Reddy, K. S., Paccaud, F., Horton, S., and Chaturvedi, V., 2006: Cardiovascular disease, in Jamison, D. T., Breman, J. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 645–62Google ScholarPubMed
Gericke, C. A., Kurowski, C., Ranson, M. K., and Mills, A., 2003: Feasibility of scaling-up interventions: the role of interventions design, Working Paper 13, Disease Control Priorities Project, Bethesda, MD
Gilmer, T. P. et al., 2007: Cost-effectiveness of diabetes case management for low-income populations, Health Services Research 5, 1943–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Global IDEA Scientific Advisory Committee, 2004: Health and economic benefits of an accelerated program of research to combat global infectious diseases, Canadian Medical Association Journal 171(10), 1203–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gostin, L. O., Friedman, E. A., Ooms, G., Gebauer, T., Gupta, N., Sridhar, D., Chenguang, W., Røttingen, J. A., and Sanders, D., 2011: The joint action and learning initiative: towards a global agreement on national and global responsibilities for health, PLoS Med, 8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Government of India – IIPS, 2011: Global Adult Tobacco Survey: India, Government of India, MOHFW, New Delhi
Gruber, J. and Mullainathan, S., 2002: Do cigarette taxes make smokers happier?, NBER Working Paper 8872, NBER, Cambridge, MA
Guindon, E. and Bettcher, D., 2001: Tobacco control in tobacco-producing countries, Bulletin, World Health Organization 79, 1086Google ScholarPubMed
Gupta, P. C. and Mehta, H. C., 2000: Cohort study of all-cause mortality among tobacco users in Mumbai, India, Bulletin, World Health Organization 78, 877–83Google ScholarPubMed
He, F. J. and MacGregor, G. A., 2004: Effects of longer-term modest salt reduction on blood pressure, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 1, CD004937
Hill, C., 2003: Le tabac en France les vrais chiffres, La Documentation Française, ParisGoogle Scholar
Hill, C. and Laplanche, A., 2003: Le tabac en France les vrais chiffres, La Documentation Française, Paris
Hoddinott, J., Rosegrant, M., and Torero, M., 2012: Investments to reduce hunger and undernutrition, Paper prepared for 2012 Copenhagen Consensus, see Chapter 6 in this volume
Hooper, L., Barlett, C., Smith, G. D., and Ebrahim, S., 2004: Advice to reduce dietary salt for prevention of cardiovascular disease, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 1, CD003656
Hu, T., Xu, X. P., and Keeler, T., 1998: Earmarked tobacco taxes: lessons learned, in Abedian, I., van der Merwe, R., Wilkins, N., and Jha, P. (eds.), The Economics of Tobacco Control: Towards an Optimal Policy Mix, University of Cape Town102–18Google Scholar
Huang, E. S. et al., 2007: The cost-effectiveness of improving diabetes care in US federally qualified community health centers, Health Services Research 6, 2174–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hum, R. J., Jha, P., McGahan, A. M., and Cheng, Y. L., 2013: Global divergence in critical income for adult and childhood survival: analyses of mortality using Michaelis–Menten, eLife Sciences 1:e00051
Inglis, S. C. et al., 2006: Extending the horizon in chronic heart failure: effects of multidisciplinary, home-based intervention relative to usual care, Circulation 144, 2466–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), 2010a: Financing Global Health 2010: Development Assistance and Country Spending in Economic Uncertainty, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, Seattle
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, 2010b: Adult Mortality Estimates by Country 1970–2010, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, Seattle
Institute of Medicine (IOM), 1985: New Vaccine Development: Establishing Priorities, Vol. 1 of Diseases of Importance in the United States, National Academies Press, Washington, DCGoogle Scholar
Institute of Medicine (IOM), 2010: Promoting Cardiovascular Health in the Developing World, Fuster, V. and Kelly, Br. B. (eds.), National Academies Press, Washington, DCGoogle Scholar
International Diabetes Federation (IDF), 2010: International Diabetes Atlas, Brussels
Jamison, D. T., 2006a: Investing in health, in Jamison, D. T., Breman, J., Measham, A. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn, Oxford University Press, New York, 3–34Google ScholarPubMed
Jamison, D. T., 2006b: The neglected problems of stillbirths and neonatal deaths, Paper prepared for the Global Forum on Health Research, 10th Meeting, Cairo
Jamison, D. T. and Radelet, S., 2005: Making aid smarter, Finance and Development 42(2), 42–6Google Scholar
Jamison, D. T., Sachs, J., and Wang, J., 2001: The effect of the AIDS epidemic on economic welfare in Sub-Saharan Africa, CMH Working Paper WG1:13, Commission on Macroeconomics and Health, World Health Organization, Geneva
Jamison, D. T., Jha, P., and Zatonski, W., 2002: The effect of the tobacco and chronic disease on economic welfare in former socialist economies, Poland Health Foundation Annual Meeting, Warsaw
Jamison, D. T., Jamison, E. A., and Sachs, J. D., 2003: Assessing the determinants of growth when health is explicitly included in the measure of economic welfare, Paper presented at the 4th World Congress of the International Health Economics Association, San Francisco
Jamison, D. T., Sandbu, M. E., and Wang, J., 2004: Why has infant mortality decreased at such different rates in different countries? Working Paper 21, Disease Control Priorities Project, Bethesda, MD
Jamison, D. T., Breman, J., Measham, A. R. et al. (eds.), 2006a: Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn. Oxford University Press, New YorkPubMed
Jamison, D. T., Shahid-Salles, S., Jamison, J. S., Lawn, J., and Zupan, J., 2006b: Incorporating deaths near the time of birth into estimates of the global burden of disease, in Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors, Oxford University Press, New York, 427–62Google ScholarPubMed
Jamison, E. A., Jamison, D. T., and Hanushek, E. A., 2007: The effects of education quality on income growth and mortality decline, Economics of Education Review 26, 772–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jamison, D. T., Jha, P., and Bloom, D. E., 2008: Disease Control, Paper prepared for 2008 Copenhagen Consensus,
Jamison, D. T., Jha, P., Malhotra, V., and Verguet, S., 2012a: The 20th Century Transformation of Human Health: Its Magnitude and Value, Copenhagen Consensus Center, Manuscript in press, to be published in How Much Have Global Problems Cost the World? A Scorecard from 1900 to 2050, Cambridge University Press
Jamison, D. T., Murphy, S. M., Sandbu, M. E., and Wang, J., 2012b: Why has under-five mortality decreased at such different rates in different countries?, Unpublished manuscript
Jamison, D. T., Jha, P., Laxminarayan, R., and Ord, T., 2012c: Infectious disease, injury and reproductive health, Paper prepared for 2012 Copenhagen Consensus Chapter 7 in this volume
Janssens, B. et al., 2007: Offering integrated care for HIV/AIDS, diabetes and hypertension within chronic disease clinics in Cambodia, Bulletin, World Health Organization 85, 880–5Google Scholar
Jeemon, P. and Reddy, K. S., 2010: Social determinant of cardiovascular disease outcomes in Indians, Indian Journal of Medical Research 132, 617–22Google Scholar
Jha, P., 2009a: Avoidable global cancer deaths and total deaths from smoking, Nature Reviews Cancer 9, 655–64CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jha, P., 2009b: Avoidance of worldwide cancer mortality and total mortality from smoking, Nature Reviews Cancer 9, 655–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jha, P. and Anderson, I., 2007: Reducing adult deaths from chronic diseases in Asia: evidence and opportunities, in D. T. Jamison, R. Measham, J. B. Breman et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York
Jha, P. and Chaloupka, F. J., 1999: Curbing the Epidemic: Governments and the Economics of Tobacco Control, The World Bank, Washington, DC
Jha, P. and Chaloupka, F. J., 2000a: The economics of global tobacco control, British Medical Journal 321, 358–61CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jha, P. and Chaloupka, F. J., 2000b: Tobacco Control in Developing Countries, Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Jha, P. and Chen, Z., 2007: Poverty and chronic diseases in Asia: challenges and opportunities, Canadian Medical Association Journal 177(9), 1059–62CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jha, P. and Laxminarayan, R., 2009: Choosing Health: An Entitlement for all Indians, CGHR, University of Toronto, Toronto and New Delhi,
Jha, P. and Mills, A., 2002: Improving Health of the Global Poor. The Report of Working Group 5 of the Commission on Macroeconomics and Health, Organization, Geneva
Jha, P., Peto, R., and Zatonski, W., 2006b: Social inequalities in male mortality, and in male mortality from smoking: indirect estimation from national death rates in England and Wales, Poland, and North America, Lancet 368, 367–70CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jha, P., Mills, A., Hanson, K., Kumaranayake, L. et al., 2002: Improving the health of the global poor, Science 295(5562), 2036–9CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jha, P., Chaloupka, F. J., Moore, J., Gajalakshmi, V., Gupta, P. C., Peck, R., Asma, S., and Zatonski, W., 2006a: Tobacco addiction, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, R., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 869–86Google ScholarPubMed
John, R. M., Sung, H.-Y., and Max, W. B., 2004: Economic cost of tobacco use in India, Tobacco Control 18, 138–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar
John, R. M., Sung, H. Y., Max, W. B., and Ross, H., 2011: Counting 15 million more poor in India, thanks to tobacco, Tobacco Control 20, 349–52CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Joseph, R. et al., 2011: Male smoking in India: trend analysis from 1998–2010, British Medical Journal Open 2013, in pressGoogle Scholar
Kohler, H.-P., 2012: Population growth, Paper prepared for 2012 Copenhagen Consensus, Chapter 9 in this volume
Larsen, B., Hutton, G., and Khanna, N., 2008: Air pollution, Paper prepared for 2008 Copenhagen Consensus
Laxminarayan, R., Chow, J., and Shahid-Salles, S. A., 2006a: Intervention cost-effectiveness: overview of main messages, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, A., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 35–86Google ScholarPubMed
Laxminarayan, R., Mills, A. J., Breman, J. G., Measham, A. R., Alleyne, G., Claeson, M., Jha, P., Musgrove, P., Chow, J., Shahid-Salles, S. A., and Jamison, D. T., 2006b: Advancement of global health: key messages from the disease control priorities project, Lancet 367, 1193–208CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liang, X. et al., 2011: Effect of mobile phone intervention for diabetics on glycemic control: a meta-anyalsis, Diabetic Medicine 28, 455–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lightwood, J., Collins, D., Lapsley, H., and Novotny, T. E., 2000: Estimating the costs of tobacco use, in Jha, P. and Chaloupka, F. J. (eds.), Tobacco Control in Developing CountriesOxford University Press, New York, 63–103Google Scholar
Lim, S. S. et al., 2010: A comparative risk assessment of the burden of disease and injury attributable to 67 risk factors and risk factor clusters in 21 regions, 1990–2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010, Lancet 380, 2224–60, CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, B. Q., Peto, R., Chen, Z. M. et al., 1998: Emerging tobacco hazards in China: 1. retrospective proportional mortality study of one million deaths, British Medical Journal 317, 1411–22CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lopez, A. D., Begg, S., and Bos, E., 2006a: Demographic and epidemiological characteristics of major regions of the world, 1990 and 2001, in Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors, Oxford University Press, New York, 17–44CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), 2006b: Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors, Oxford University Press, New YorkCrossRefPubMed
Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), 2006c: Global and regional burden of disease and risk factors, 2001: systematic analysis of population health data, Lancet 367, 1747–57CrossRefPubMed
Lopez-Casasnovas, G., Rivera, B., and Currais, L. (eds.), 2005: Health and Economic Growth: Findings and Policy Implications, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA
Lujan, J., Ostwald, S. T., and Ortiz, M., 2007: Promoting diabetes intervention for Mexican Americans, Diabetes Education 33, 660–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mathers, C. D., Murray, C. J. L., and Lopez, A. D., 2006: The burden of disease and mortality by condition: data, methods and results for the year 2001, in Lopez, A. D., Mathers, C. D., Ezzati, M., Jamison, D. T., and Murray, C. J. L. (eds.), Global Burden of Disease and Risk Factors, Oxford University Press, New York, 45–240Google ScholarPubMed
Measham, A. R., Rao, K. D., Jamison, D. T., Wang, J., and Singh, A., 2003: The performance of India and Indian states in reducing infant mortality and fertility, 1975–1990, Economic and Political Weekly 34, 1359–67Google Scholar
Mills, A. and Shillcutt, S., 2004: Communicable diseases, in Lomborg, B. (ed.), Global Crises, Global Solutions, Cambridge University Press, 62–114CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mills, A., Rasheed, F., and Toilman, S., 2006: Strengthening health systems, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, A., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 87–102Google ScholarPubMed
Molarius, A. et al., 2001: Trends in cigarette smoking in 36 populations from the early 1980s to the mid-1990s: findings from the WHO MONICA Project, American Journal of Public Health 91, 206–12Google ScholarPubMed
Monteiro, C. A., Cavalcante, T. M., Moura, E. C., Claro, R. M, and Szwarcwald, C. L., 2007: Population-based evidence of a strong decline in the prevalence of smokers in Brazil (1989–2003), Bulletin, World Health Organization 85, 527–34CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mulligan, J., Fox-Rushby, J. A., Adam, T., Johns, B., and Mills, A., 2003: Unit costs of health care inputs in low and middle income regions, Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Disease Control Priorities, Project Working Paper 9, Bethesda, MD
Murphy, K. M. and Topel, R. H., 2006: The value of health and longevity, Journal of Political Economy 114, 871–904Google Scholar
Murray, E., Burns, J., See Tai, S., Lai, R., and Nazareth, I., 2005: Interactive health communication applications for people with chronic disease, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 4. ArtGoogle Scholar
Nugent, R. and Feigl, A., 2010: Where have all the donors gone? Scarce donor funding for non-communicable diseases, Center for Global Development, Working Paper 228Google Scholar
Orazem, P. F., 2012: The case for improving school quality and student health as a development strategy, Paper prepared for 2012 Copenhagen Consensus, Chapter 5 in this volume
Orazem, P. F., Glewwe, P., and Patrinos, H., 2008: The challenge of education, Paper prepared for 2008 Copenhagen Consensus
Peabody, J. W., Taguiwalo, M. M., Robalino, D. A., and Frenk, J., 2006: Improving the quality of care in developing countries, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, A., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 1293–1308Google ScholarPubMed
Pearson, M. L. et al., 2005: Assessing the implementation of the chronic care model in quality improvement collaboratives, Health Services Research 40, 978–96CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peck, R., Chaloupka, F. J., Jha, P., and Lightwood, J., 2000: Welfare analyses of tobacco, in Jha, P. and Chaloupka, F. J. (eds.), Tobacco Control in Developing Countries, Oxford University Press, 131–52Google Scholar
Peto, R., 2006: Noncommunicable diseases, Paper delivered at Disease Control Priorities Project Launch and 2nd Global Meeting of the Inter-Academy Medical Panel, Beijing
Peto, R. and Baigent, C., 1998: Trials: the next 50 years. Large scale randomised evidence of moderate benefits, British Medical Journal 317, 1170–1CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peto, R., Collins, R., Parish, S. et al., 1995: Cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, and stroke: 13,000 strokes in 450,000 people in 45 prospective cohorts, Prospective Studies Collaboration, Lancet 346, 1647–53
Peto, R., Lopez, A. D., and Boreham, J. 2006: Mortality from Smoking in Developed Countries, 1950–2000, 2nd edn., Oxford, Clinical Trial Service Unit , accessed September 24, 2007
Peto, R., Whitlock, G., and Jha, P., 2010: Effects of obesity and smoking on US Life expectancy, New England Journal of Medicine 362, 855–7Google Scholar
Popkin, B. M., Siega-Riz, A. M., and Haines, P. S., 1996: A comparison of dietary trends among racial and socioeconomic groups in the United States, New England Journal of Medicine 335(10), 716–20CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Preston, S. H., 1975: The changing relation between mortality and level of economic development, Population Studies 29, 231–48CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pritchard, C., 2004: Developments in economic evaluation in health care: a review of HEED, OHE Briefing 40, Office of Health Economics, London, March
PSC Collaborators, 1995: Cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, and stroke: 13,000 strokes in 450,000 people in 45 prospective cohorts. Prospective studies collaboration, Lancet 346, 1647–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rajaratnam, J. K. et al., 2010a: Worldwide mortality in men and women aged 15–59 years from 1970 to 2010: a systematic analysis, Lancet 375, 1704–20CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rajaratnam, J. K. et al., 2010b: Neonatal, postneonatal, childhood, and under-5 mortality for 187 countries, 1970–2010: a systematic analysis of progress towards Millennium Development Goal 4, Lancet 375, 1988–2008CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rani, M. et al., 2003: Tobacco use in India: prevalence and predictors of smoking and chewing in a national cross sectional household survey, Tobacco Control 12(4), 1–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raynauld, A., 1992: Smokers’ burden on society: myth and reality in Canada, Canadian Public Policy 18(3), 300–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Recours, A., 1999: Politique de santé et Fiscalité du tabac: Rapport à Monsieur le Premier Ministre, September
Reddy, K. S., Prabhakaran, D., Jeemon, P., Thankappan, K. R., Joshi, P., Chaturvedi, V., Ramakrishnan, L., and F. Ahmed, 2007: Educational status and cardiovascular risk profile in Indians, Proceedings of the Natural Academy of Sciences USA 104(41), 16263–8CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
RGI/CGHR, 2009: Causes of death in India: results from the Million Death Study, Registrar General, New Delhi
Richardson, G. et al., 2008: Cost-effectiveness of the expert patients programme (EPP) for patients with chronic conditions, Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 62, 361–7CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rijsberman, F. and Zwane, A. P., 2012: Sanitation and water challenge paper, Paper prepared for 2012 Copenhagen Consensus, Chapter 10 in this volume
Rodgers, A., Lawes, C. M. M., Gaziano, T., and Vos, T., 2006: The growing burden of risk from high blood pressure, cholesterol, and bodyweight, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, A. R., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 851–68Google ScholarPubMed
Rubinstein, A., Colantonio, L., Bardach, A. et al., 2010: Estimation of the burden of cardiovascular disease attributable to modifiable risk factors and cost-effectiveness of preventative interventions to reduce this burden in Argentina, BMC Public Health 10, 627CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rousson, V. and Paccaud, F., 2010: A set of indicators for decomposing the secular increase of life expectancy, Population Health Metrics 8, a–dCrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Salomon, J. A., Carvalho, N., Gutiérrez-Delgado, C., Orozco, R., Mancuso, A. et al., 2012: Interventions to reduce the burden of non-communicable diseases in Mexico: cost effectiveness analysis, British Medical Journal, 344:e355
Singhal, S., Gupta, P. C., Dikshit, R., and Jha, P., 2012: Increased risk of coronary heart disease in female smokers, Lancet 379, 802CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shukla, H. C., Gupta, P. C., Mehta, H. C., and Hebert, J. R., 2002: Descriptive epidemiology of body mass index of an urban adult population in western India, Journal of Epidemiol Community Health 56, 876–80CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Suhrcke, M., Nugent, R., Stuckler, D., and Rocco, I., 2006: Chronic Disease: An Economic Perspective, Oxford Health Alliance, London
Tauras, J. A. and Chaloupka, F. J., 2004: Impact of tobacco control spending and tobacco control policies on adolescents’ attitudes and beliefs about cigarette smoking, Evidence Based Prevention Medicine 1, 111–20Google Scholar
Tolley, G., Kenkel, D., and Fabian, R., 1994: Valuing Health for Policy: An Economic Approach, University of Chicago Press
United Nations (UN), 2009: Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, World Population Prospects: The 2008 Revision, Geneva
US DHHS, 2001: The Health Consequences of Smoking: The Changing Cigarette, Report of the Surgeon General, US DHHS, Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Washington, DC
Van Olmen, J. et al., 2011: The growing caseload of chronic life-long conditions calls for a move towards full self-management in low income countries, Globalization and Health 7, 1–10CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Walbeek, C., 2005: Tobacco control in South Africa, International Journal of Health Promotion and Education, Suppl. 4, 25–8
Viscusi, W. K. and Aldy, J. E., 2003: The value of a statistical life: a critical review of market estimates throughout the world, NBER Working Paper 9487, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA
Wagner, E. H., Austin, B. T., and Von Korff, M., 1996: Organizing care for patients with chronic illness, Milbank Quarterly 74, 511–44CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weatherall, D., Greenwood, B., Chee, H. L., and Wasi, P., 2006: Science and technology for disease control: past, present, and future, in Jamison, D. T., Measham, A. R., Breman, J. B. et al. (eds.), Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd edn., Oxford University Press, New York, 119–38Google ScholarPubMed
Wolf, M., 2006: The absurdities of a ban on smoking, Financial Times, June 22
Woodruff, S. I., 2002: Evaluation of a culturally-appropriate smoking cessation intervention for Latinos, Tobacco Control, 11, 361–7CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Bank, 1993: World Development Report: Investing in Health, Oxford University Press, New YorkGoogle Scholar
World Bank, 2003: World Development Indicators, World Bank, Washington, DCGoogle Scholar
World Economic Forum (WEF), 2008: Tackling Tuberculosis: The Business Response, The World Economic Forum, Davos
World Health Organization (WHO), 2000: World Health Report: Health Systems, Geneva
World Health Organization, 2001: Commission on Macroeconomics and Health, Macroeconomics and Health: Investing in Health for Economic Development, WHO, Geneva
World Health Organization, 2002: Innovative care for chronic conditions: building blocks for action, , accessed February 12, 2012
World Health Organization, 2010: WHO Technical Manual on Tobacco Tax Administration, Geneva
World Health Organization, 2011a: Global routine vaccination coverage, 2010, Weekly epidemiological record 46, 509–20
World Health Organization, 2011b: Scaling up action against non-communicable diseases: how much will it cost, accessed February 26, 2013
World Health Organization, 2012: Hepatitis B, , accessed March 9, 2012
Xavier, D., Pais, P., Devereaux, P. J., Xie, C., Prabhakaran, D., Reddy, K. S., Gupta, R., Joshi, P., Kerkar, P., Thanikachalam, S., Haridas, K. K., Jaison, T. M., Naik, S., Maity, A. K., and Yusuf, S., 2008: CREATE registry investigators: treatment and outcomes of acute coronary syndromes in India (CREATE). A prospective analysis of registry data, Lancet 371(9622), 1435–42CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zaridze, D., Brennan, P., Boreham, J., Boroda, A., Karpov, R., Lazarev, A., Konobeevskaya, I., Igitov, V., Terechova, T., Boffetta, P., and Peto, R., 2009: Alcohol and cause-specific mortality in Russia: a retrospective case-control study of 48,557 adult deaths, Lancet 373(9682), 2201–14CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zatonski, W. and Jha, P., 2002: The health status of Central and Eastern European after 1990: a second look, Health Development in Central and Eastern Europe after Transition. Warsaw, 2000Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×