International officials demand the United Nations for urgent measures not to confront -infected diseases

A group of officials and health experts have called on the United Nations to take immediate and urgent measures to confront -contaminated diseases, and the group that includes health ministers, international officials and experts, warned in a message about the 80th United Nations General Assembly, which calls them the Esschar of Infectious Systems, Kid disease and the respiratory system. The message confirmed that each person deserves to live a longer and healthier life, earning a better future, asking an immediate move that rearranges global health priorities. Among the signatories of the letter are the Egyptian Minister of Health, Dr. Khaled Abdel Ghaffar, Jordan’s health activist, Princess Dina Marad, the former president of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso, CEO of Amrif Hamith Africa, Dr. Gydinji Getahi, former British Health Minister Lord Andrew Lansley, and former head of the national health authority in the English, Mr. The United Nations has led to global health efforts for 8 decades to increase average life expectancy at birth, which is currently 73 years old, but the years of a healthy life are not an average of 63 years, which means there is a ten -year gap taxed by chronic exhausted diseases and causes the aggravation of the liabilities and costs of health systems. The signatories of the message said that this crisis is tired of the collapsing factors, including the aging of the population, climate change, rapid urbanization, and unhealthy living patterns, as well as climate and healthy emergencies, leading to exhausting health systems and a major loss of life. In the letter, they emphasized that investment in prevention and healthcare is not a burial burden, but rather an engine for growth, and it is estimated that about a third of economic growth in advanced economies has been achieved over the past century thanks to the improvement of public health, and that every dollar invests in health, an economic and social return between 2 and 4 dollars. The letter indicated that the pandemic of the corona revealed the fragility of healthy structures in most countries of the world, and to avoid the repetition of this scenario, the reports recommend the need to build systems that can withstand crises by updating medical infrastructure, filling the health power and filling the financial gap. While governments increase retirement age to meet the pressure of the aging of the population, the rate of chronic diseases is increasing at an unprecedented rate. Experts expected these diseases to cause about 86% of deaths worldwide by 2050, and that the annual delegations associated with it will increase by about 90% compared to 2019. Recent estimates indicate that the countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development need to increase health spending, equivalent to 1.4% of GDP. The message believes that science and technology, from artificial intelligence to early diagnosis and advanced treatments, represent the basic line of defense to meet the increasing burden of chronic diseases, but the numbers show that less than 10% of patients in some countries receive compatible care with the approved medical instructions, which impose the necessity of the acceptance of innovations and the fair access to all groups. The signatories emphasized that the confrontation of chronic diseases has become a condition of improving sustainable economic growth, protecting societies and enabling the workforce to continue production.