Think regionally and globally (Share information, data and success stories; insist on integrating NCDs, including CVD, and their risk factors into larger development and economic agendas/programs; promote cross-sectoral (all-of-society) approaches combining the experience and efforts of multiple government sectors/bodies, civil society, academia, the private sector and international organizations
Develop programs that combine population- and individual-level approaches to address the proximate causes of CVD (i.e. smoking, unhealthy alcohol use, diet high in salt, sugar and trans-fats, inadequate physical activity) plus the distal causes or social determinants of health (e.g., issues related to equity, education, gender, migrant status, ethnicity, economic, cultural and environmental factors)
Use a life course approach that targets children, youth and future generations (pregnant women) while focusing on vulnerable groups (e.g., the poor, ethnic minorities, migrants, women, etc.)
Improve health systems by: a) integrating NCD/CVD prevention and control into primary health care (through training as well as capacity-building), b) strengthening the health sector workforce through training, education and task shifting (more use of non-physician providers), c) integrating the use of m-health to prevent, detect and manage NCDs/CVD risk factors
Link research and action by: a) applying evidence-based solutions based on data from surveillance and local/regional research that, b) disaggregating data by such factors as geographic region, level of development (HICs, MICs, LICs), SES, gender and ethnicity
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