WHO Launches Action Plan for Physical Activity and Health - The India Saga

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WHO Launches Action Plan for Physical Activity and Health

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has launched a new action plan on physical activity and health. The WHO Global action plan…

WHO Launches Action Plan for Physical Activity and Health

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has launched a new action plan on physical activity and health.

The WHO Global action plan on physical activity and health 2018-2030: More active people for a healthier worldÂÂshows how countries can reduce physical inactivity in adults and adolescents by 15% by 2030. It recommends a set of 20 policy areas, which combined, aim to create more active societies through improving the environments and opportunities for people of all ages and abilities to do more walking, cycling, sport, active recreation, dance and play.

It also calls for support to, for example, training of health care workers and other professionals, stronger data systems, as well as use of digital technologies.

 ÂBeing active is critical for health. But in our modern world, this is becoming more and more of a challenge, largely because  our cities and communities arenÂt designed in the right ways, said Dr Tedros Adhanom ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. ÂWe need leaders at all levels to help people to take the healthier step. This works best at city level, where most responsibility lies for creating healthier spaces.Â

Worldwide, one in five adults, and four out of five adolescents (11-17 years), do not do enough physical activity. Girls, women, older adults, poorer people, people with disabilities and chronic diseases, marginalized populations, and indigenous people have fewer opportunities to be active. 

Regular physical activity is key to preventing and treating non communicable diseases (NCDs) such as heart disease, stroke, diabetes and breast and colon cancer. NCDs are responsible for 71% of all deaths globally, including for the deaths of 15 million people per year aged 30 to 70.

Dr Tedros added: ÂYou donÂt need to be a professional athlete to choose to be active. Taking the stairs instead of the elevator makes a difference. Or walking or using the bike instead of driving to your neighbourhood bakery. ItÂs the choices we make each and every day that can keep us healthy. Leaders must help make these choices the easy ones. 
 
To support national efforts to implement the plan, WHO is launching an advocacy campaign to promote physical activity, LetÂs Be Active: Everyone, Everywhere,Everyday.This new drive, launched at the Portuguese Football AssociationÂs iconic Cidade do Futebol (City of Football), aims to encourage governments and city authorities to make it easier for people to be more physically active, and healthier.

Physical inactivity is more than a health challenge: the financial costs are also enormous. Globally, physical inactivity is estimated to cost US$54 billion in direct health care, of which 57% is incurred by the public sector and an additional US$14 billion is attributable to lost productivity. 


World leaders will meet later this year to take action on physical inactivity and other causes of NCDs, and mental disorders, when they take part in the Third United Nations General Assembly High-level Meeting on NCDs, being held on 27 September in New York.

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