use resources for health
Stop arms race, use resources for health, education: PM to global leaders
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Tuesday urged world leaders to put an end to international arms race and use the much-needed resources for health and education.
“On behalf of all diabetic patients and caregivers, I call upon the world leaders to put an immediate end to the Russia-Ukraine war. We must stop the international arms race and use the much-needed resources for our peoples’ health and education,” she said.
The premier said this in a video message aired at the World Diabetes Congress-2022 as a ‘Global Ambassador for Diabetes’ in Lisbon, Portugal.
“We need to have a world at peace to make sure that we can provide the right treatment and care to everyone diagnosed with diabetes and related co-morbidities,” she said.
Read: Bangladesh a role model for women's participation in UN peacekeeping: PM Hasina
Sheikh Hasina put emphasis on collective effort to make insulin and other life-saving drugs affordable for the poor. “It is our collective responsibility to ensure access to insulin and other life-saving drugs at an affordable price for the poor,” she said.
She said the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed many fault-lines in the global health system. Nations must draw lessons from that experience to address the inequities that can be even more fatal for diabetes and other NCDs, she said.
The PM said international political will must be mobilized to invest in diabetes prevention, treatment and research.
She called upon the International Diabetes Federation to join hands with World Health Organization and other relevant global health actors to help implement the Global Diabetes Compact.
"There is no alternative to international financing for the prevention, treatment and research of diabetes," she added.
The premier referred to WHO saying that around 422 million people in the world suffer from diabetes and the disease costs around 1.5 million lives every year.
Read: Rich countries fail to keep climate finance promise: PM Hasina
In Bangladesh, she said, more than 8.5 million people, including children, live with diabetes and related co-morbidities.
She said complications and premature death from diabetes can be prevented.
Mentioning that some lifestyle changes like regular exercise and a healthy diet can make a lot of difference, she said with the right medication and caution, a diabetes patient can enjoy a regular life.
She said the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development recognises non-communicable diseases like diabetes to be a major challenge.
Bangladesh targets to reduce premature mortality from diabetes and other major NCDs by one-third by 2030, she added.
Sheikh Hasina said her government has been implementing a pro-people health policy that gives importance to diabetes prevention and control through community awareness.
Her government offers free treatment to diabetic patients in the country’s public sector hospitals, she said, adding that the government has recently started providing free insulin.
More than 18,000 community clinics and union health centers across the country are equipped with trained professionals and diabetes testing facilities, she said.
The PM said the Diabetic Association of Bangladesh works closely with the government for promoting nationwide diabetes care and awareness building.
1 year ago