3. Health care equity
There are major discrepancies in the quality of people’s health across socio-economic groups, WHO said. For example, WHO noted that there is an 18-year difference between the life expectancy of people in low- and high-income countries, as well as significant differences in life expectancies among people living within the same countries and cities. In addition, low- and middle-income countries face a disproportionately large burden of cancer, diabetes, and other noncommunicable diseases, which can quickly put a strain on the resources of low-income households.
WHO said it is working to address disparities in health equity by improving “child and maternal care, nutrition, gender equality, mental health, and access to adequate water and sanitation” and providing guidance on how countries can work to improve health care equity.
4. Access to treatments
According to WHO, about one-third of people across the world lack access to essential health products such as diagnostic tools, medicines, and vaccines. Limited access to these products fuel drug resistance and threaten people’s lives and health, according to WHO.
To address the issue, WHO said it will “sharpen its focus” on efforts to combat “substandard and falsified medical products; enhance[e] the capacity of low-income countries to assure the quality of medical products throughout the supply chain; and improve[e] access to diagnosis and treatment for noncommunicable diseases.”