City life and its modern
trappings have brought bad habits to developing African nations that will see
more die of chronic illness than infectious diseases by 2030, a study showed
Tuesday.
AFP
report continues:
A
World Health Organization (WHO) survey of 33 countries has shown that most
adults in Africa have at least one risk factor increasing their chance of
developing deadly lifestyle diseases such as heart disease, cancer and
diabetes.
These
include smoking, harmful use of alcohol, a poor diet which does not include the
recommended five servings of fruit and vegetables a day, and low levels of
physical activity.
Report
author Abdikamal Alisalad told AFP that the level of unhealthy habits in many
African nations had come as a shock.
"We
were surprised because we thought we would not see this kind of situation
currently. We were expecting it maybe 30 or 40 years from now," he said.
Particularly
disturbing was the fact that an estimated 46 percent of Africans suffer high
blood pressure -- the highest worldwide.
He
attributes the rise in non-communicable diseases to changes in developing
societies.
"People
are moving from the rural areas, going to urban, metropolitan areas. The
middle-income group is growing, life expectancy is also growing."
While
the tobacco, alcohol and food industries have had to adapt to growing
health-consciousness in the West, this is not the case in Africa.
The
WHO study found that daily tobacco use ranges from five to 26 percent in
Africa, and is only growing. Cigarettes are often a fraction of the price in
Africa than in Europe.
"They
see Africa as a fertile ground because of the legislation and policy weaknesses
that exist in our region, they see opportunity to make a lot of profit,"
said Alisalad.
"We
found out that in some of our countries the alcohol industry is the one who is
doing the alcohol policy. It's absurd."
Most
people were not eating enough fruits and vegetables, and a rise of junk food
and unhealthy diets meant that, paradoxically, sub-Saharan Africa suffered from
the double burden of under nutrition and obesity.
The
survey showed an average of 35 percent of people were overweight and that the
average time spent in moderate or high intensity physical activity ranged from
21 minutes per day in Mauritania to 386 minutes per day in Mozambique.
Women
were more likely to be inactive and overweight.
The
report showed that some four million people will die from non-communicable
diseases (NCDs) in Africa by 2020, and the figure will surpass those of
infectious diseases by 2030.
"We
are still struggling with communicable diseases ... but now you see with the
number of people that require screening, counselling and treatment for chronic
non-communicable disease, our health system can't cope," said Alisalad.
"Government should raise domestic financing mechanisms so they can accommodate this growing burden. The whole health system should be reorganized or reoriented."
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