• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Friday, November 21, 2025
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home WORLD

What COVID-19 pandemic teaches us about preventing chronic diseases

KI News by KI News
May 19, 2021
in WORLD
A A
0
‘Three COVID-19 disease phases identified’
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

Vancouver (Canada): (The Conversation) Forty-four per cent of Canadian adults live with at least one chronic health condition such as heart disease, diabetes or a mood disorder. Up to 80 per cent of these conditions can be prevented.

However, chronic disease prevention and health promotion are not taken seriously enough. Instead, Canadian health care is focused on treating acute and chronic conditions. As a result, the treatment of chronic diseases costs our health-care system 68 billion per year and overburdens health-care providers.

More News

Bangladesh’s interim govt urges India to extradite Sheikh Hasina, her aide

PM Modi will not address General Debate at high-level UNGA session

Looks like we lost India, Russia to ‘darkest’ China: US President Trump

Load More

While the pandemic has focused the world’s attention on how to prevent infectious disease, many of the lessons learned from COVID-19 prevention can also be applied to chronic disease prevention.

We a scientist who develops health behaviour-change interventions, and a family doctor who is passionate about preventive medicine have noted several pandemic lessons that could be used to improve chronic disease prevention. Here are three:

Address the inequities

COVID-19 infections are not evenly distributed among Canadians. Infection rates are higher in regions with greater proportions of low-income and Black residents.

Likewise, health iniquities mean that racialized and Indigenous people, immigrants, people with disabilities and those affected by poverty are at increased risk for developing chronic diseases. These groups may not have equitable access to preventive resources such as healthy foods, a family doctor, health screening and health promotion programmes. In addition, the stress caused by poverty, trauma and discrimination can affect the body, increasing the likelihood of developing a chronic disease.

COVID-19 has exposed long-standing health inequities. In response, we’ve seen community groups, public health agencies and governments work together to provide free masks, community testing sites, vaccines, and other services in low-income and racialized communities. Health inequities that increase the risk for chronic disease could be eliminated by continuing to provide these types of services to the people most in need.

A one-size-fits-all approach doesn’t work

Physical distancing can work to reduce the risk of COVID-19, but is impossible if you live in a multi-generational household, use public transportation or have a disability and rely on caregivers. From masks to physical distancing to physical barriers, different types of protection are needed to reduce the risk of COVID-19 spread for people in different circumstances. Even better is when communities are engaged and empowered to develop their own culturally appropriate advice and messages.

Likewise, chronic disease prevention programs must be tailored to take into account a community’s needs and priorities. This is best accomplished by designing programs and policies in partnership with the communities who will use them. Community involvement helps ensure programs are tailored to community members’ needs and that users will benefit.

For instance, researchers from the University of British Columbia Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention and Management worked with nearly 300 community members to design a physical activity program specifically for people with disabilities. Over six months, program participants increased their weekly physical activity by 363 per cent and significantly improved their heart and lung health. The program would not have been so successful had community members not helped to tailor the program to the unique challenges and needs of people with disabilities.

We can (and must) get research into practice faster

The pandemic has shown that science can be drastically accelerated to move innovations quickly from the lab to the community to individual citizens. The pandemic prompted many researchers to pause their own projects and collaborate worldwide to detect and identify the virus, study its transmission and create and test vaccines. Funding was allocated to facilitate research collaborations.

These actions sped up the research process. The findings were then quickly translated into public health advice, guidelines for medical care and vaccines that have been shared and used around the world.

Research can guide which evidence-based chronic disease prevention programs are put into practice. However, the translation of health research evidence into practice is notoriously slow.

A frequently cited study estimated that it takes 17 years to put just a fraction of health research into practice. One reason for this delay is that the scientists who develop and test chronic disease prevention programs, and the community, health-care and government organisations who deliver programs, typically do not work together.

The pandemic has changed the culture of science. We have seen the benefits when scientists collaborate across disciplines, and industry and government partners are at the ready to quickly move new discoveries into practice.

If we approached chronic disease prevention with the same urgency, promising evidence-based interventions could be quickly scaled up and delivered in communities across the country.

Applying the lessons of COVID-19 to chronic disease prevention has the potential to benefit millions of Canadians and save billions in health-care costs. The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has proven that focused attention and collaborative efforts can yield effective results in disease prevention and treatment. (The Conversation)

Previous Post

If not stopped, third wave of COVID-19 can have deadly consequences: Dr Hardeep Singh

Next Post

40 oxygen cylinders go missing from SDH Kupwara, 3 staffers suspended

KI News

KI News

Kashmir Images is an English language daily newspaper published from Srinagar (J&K), India. The newspaper is one of the largest circulated English dailies of Kashmir and its hard copies reach every nook and corner of Kashmir Valley besides Jammu and Ladakh region.

Related Posts

Bangladesh’s interim govt urges India to extradite Sheikh Hasina, her aide

Ahead of polls, Hasina announces to build 560 model mosques, Islamic university in B’desh
by Press Trust of india
November 17, 2025

Dhaka: Bangladesh's interim government on Monday urged India to immediately extradite deposed prime minister Sheikh Hasina and her former home...

Read moreDetails

PM Modi will not address General Debate at high-level UNGA session

PM Modi, senior ministers take oath as members of 18th Lok Sabha
by Press Trust of india
September 6, 2025

United Nations: Prime Minister Narendra Modi will not address the General Debate at the annual high-level session of the United...

Read moreDetails

Looks like we lost India, Russia to ‘darkest’ China: US President Trump

Sweeping Trump tariffs draw dismay, calls for talks from countries around globe
by Press Trust of india
September 5, 2025

Washington:  It looks like the US has lost India and Russia to "darkest" China, President Donald Trump said on Friday...

Read moreDetails

Putin chides Trump for using colonial era tactics to pressure leaders of India, China

Global leaders including Putin condole Vajpayee’s death
by Press Trust of india
September 4, 2025

Beijing: Russian President Vladimir Putin has reprimanded his US counterpart Donald Trump for attempting to exert colonial-era pressure tactics on...

Read moreDetails

Trump’s personal rapport with Modi ‘gone now’, says former US NSA Bolton

Trump’s personal rapport with Modi ‘gone now’, says former US NSA Bolton
by Press Trust of india
September 4, 2025

New York/Washington: President Donald Trump had a very good personal relationship with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, but “that's gone now”,...

Read moreDetails

Earthquake in eastern Afghanistan kills at least 610 people, injures 1,300

Mild earthquake jolts JK
by AP/ PTI
September 1, 2025

Kabul: An earthquake in Afghanistan's east has killed at least 610 people and injured 1,300, a spokesman for the Taliban...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
GMC Sgr rebuts shortage of Oxygen in SMHS Hospital

40 oxygen cylinders go missing from SDH Kupwara, 3 staffers suspended

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.