Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Related Disorders
Copyright: Julia Manzerova
"This volume on CVDs, renal, and respiratory disorders has particularly high value. It carries the potential to become the most effective game-changer in global health by helping all countries to combat, contain, and control the biggest killer presently prowling the globe and by enabling us to reach the 2030 goals for NCDs and health overall. As one who has witnessed the epidemic of CVDs advance menacingly across the world in the past four decades, I fervently hope that the clear and convincing messages conveyed by the extensively researched and elegantly communicated analyses in this volume will be heard, heeded, and harmonized with policy and practice in all countries."
News and Events
DCP3 Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Related Disorders volume editor, Dr. Shuchi Anand and chapter author Dr. Nisreen Salti - along with This Week in Global Health's Dr. Jessica Taaffe - participated in the latest episode of TWiGH to discuss cardiovascular and respiratory disorders (CVRD). The...
Global populations are undergoing a major epidemiological transition in which the burden of atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases is shifting rapidly from high-income to low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs). Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is no exception,
DCP3 editors and authors joined colleagues from around the globe at the fourth annual Global Health Economics Colloquium hosted at the University of California, San Francisco on February 10, 2017. This year's topical focus was the economics of non-communicable diseases, and featured a keynote...
Volume Editors
To obtain copies of Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Related Disorders:
Download the entire volume from The World Bank
Purchase copies of the volume from Amazon.
Volume Citation: Prabhakaran, D., S. Anand, T. Gaziano, J-C. Mbanya, Y. Wu, and R. Nugent, editors. 2017. Cardiovascular, Respiratory, and Related Disorders. Disease Control Priorities, third edition, volume 5. Washington, DC: World Bank.
Lancet Article on CVRD
Published online 3 November, 2017
Introduction:
Adults today are most likely to die from a cardiovascular, respiratory, or related disorder (CVRD), with 43% of overall deaths and 49% of adult deaths estimated, by WHO...
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