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Your risk of dying from chronic disease has dropped – if you live in these countries

Sign attached to a street post indicating a no smoking district in a downtown area in California.

Public health policies that restrict smoking have helped reduce the chance of people dying from non-communicable diseases such as lung cancer.Credit: Smith Collection/Gado/Getty

The chance of dying from chronic illnesses such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes declined in four out of five countries between 2010 and 2019, finds a study of 185 countries published in The Lancet today1.

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the leading cause of death globally. The United Nations has set the goal of reducing deaths from these diseases by one-third by 2030.

The latest study is the first to investigate the change in NCD-mortality across countries. It finds that, from 2010 to 2019, the probability of dying from an NCD before the age of 80 fell in 152 countries for women and 147 countries for men.

Despite these gains, more than half of the countries saw slower declines in the 2010s compared with the previous decade. “Around the beginning of the millennium, we saw significantly lowered mortality rates, but despite political attention suddenly over the last decade, things are not doing as well as before,” says Majid Ezzati, a co-author and global-health researcher at Imperial College London.

Most and least improved: Graphic displaying data showing that among 25 high-income countries, the chance of dying from a non-communicable disease between 2001 and 2019 declined the most in Denmark, whereas the United States recorded the smallest decline.

Source: Ref. 1

All 25 high-income countries in the data set saw declines in NCD mortality between 2010 and 2019, with Denmark recording the largest drop for both sexes and the United States the smallest (see ‘Most and least improved’). China, Egypt, Nigeria, Russia and Brazil had a reduction in chronic-disease deaths, whereas India and Papua New Guinea experienced an increase in NCD deaths over the same period.

Veronica Le Nevez, a public-policy specialist at the George Institute for Global Health in Sydney, Australia, says that the report finds the biggest drivers of improvements in mortality rates were embedding better treatments and preventions in health-care systems, the widespread adoption of statins and hypertensives to lower risk of heart attack or stroke and the development of vaccines for hepatitis and cervical cancer.

Government restrictions on tobacco and alcohol have also helped to reduce mortality from diseases linked to their use, such as lung cancer and alcohol-use disorder.

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