
As the COVID-19 pandemic evolves, NCD Alliance is committed in raising the voices and the righths of people living with noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), older people and marginalised groups.
People who are over 60 years of age and people living with noncommunicable diseases (PLWNCDs) and conditions including hypertension and obesity, have a substantially higher risk of becoming severly ill or dying from the virus. COVID-19 is also causing significant "disruption of services for the prevention and treatment of NCDs" in almost all countries, likely to lead to a "long-term upsurge in deaths from NCDs" according to the World Health Organization (WHO)'s rapid assessment of service delivery for NCDs during the COVID-19 pandemic.
NCDA Resources relating to COVID-19
- The Global NCD Agenda for Resilience and Recovery from COVID-19 offers 12 win-win solutions for leaders, policymakers and other key decision-makers to build back better and equitably after COVID-19.
- Our briefing note on COVID-19 and NCDs highlights the interlinkages and impact of the pandemic on people living with NCDs.
- Our questions and answers provides a brief summary of the linkages between COVID-19 and NCDs.
- The Signalling Virtue, Promoting Harm - Unhealthy commodity industries and COVID-19 report and accompanying map shares examples of unhealthy commodity industry responses to COVID-19 crowsourced from around the world.
- Keep up to date with our resources and news pages for the latest information, publications and reports.
At the 2022 World Health Assembly in Geneva, the WHO and Bloomberg Philanthropies convened the event "Lessons Learned from NCDs and COVID-19".
The panel, featured Dr Kelly Henning, Head of Public Health Programming, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Dr John-Arne Røttingen, Ambassador for Global Health, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway, and Dr Maria Van Kerkhove, COVID-19 Technical Lead WHO. They highlighted that there has never been a better – or more important – time to invest in NCD prevention and control and implement the policies that work.
Long before the pandemic, NCDs were already responsible for nearly three-quarters of global deaths, and they continue to be leading threats to health in all countries. They have also contributed substantially to deaths and serious illness from COVID-19, yet in some cases have been deprioritized as health issues.