Related Alcohol Research Documents
Documents
WHO Statement of Concern
Date added: | 02/18/2013 |
Date modified: | 02/19/2013 |
Filesize: | 172.36 kB |
Downloads: | 3175 |
Full title: Statement of Concern - The international public health community responds to the global alcohol producers' attempts to implement the WHO global strategy on the harmful use of alcohol
On October 8th 2012, thirteen of world’s largest alcohol producers issued a set of commitments to reduce the harmful use of alcohol worldwide, ostensibly in support of the World Health Organization’s 2010 Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol.
The Global Alcohol Policy Alliance (GAPA), as an independent coalition of public health professionals, health scientists and NGO representatives, was submitted this public Statement of Concern to the WHO Secretariat in response to the activities of the global alcohol producers. Discussions on industry involvement at the AMPHORA project final conference have contributed to this document.
Communicating EU Research & Innovation - a guide for project participants
Date added: | 03/13/2013 |
Date modified: | 05/27/2013 |
Filesize: | 498.21 kB |
Downloads: | 3094 |
Author: European Comission
The brochure "Communicating EU Research & Innovation - A guide for project participants", which has recently been published by the European Commission, aims to offer a tool to better communicate about European research projects and their achieved results.
With a little creativity strategic communication efforts can help to show how project outcomes are relevant to everyday lives and how European collaboration has achieved more than would have been otherwise possible.
The European health report 2012
Date added: | 03/18/2013 |
Date modified: | 03/18/2013 |
Filesize: | 11.49 MB |
Downloads: | 3137 |
Author: WHO Regional Office for Europe
While the overall level of health across the WHO European Region has clearly improved, European health statistics show inequities within and between countries, according to the European health report 2012. The report is WHO/Europe’s flagship publication, issued every three years.
The report covers the Region’s 53 countries and nearly 900 million people, revealing that people are living longer and healthier lives. Life expectancy is rising across the Region, increasing by 5 years since 1980 to reach 76 years in 2010.
Doctors and the alcohol industry: an unhealthy mix?
Date added: | 04/15/2013 |
Date modified: | 04/15/2013 |
Filesize: | Unknown |
Downloads: | 3856 |
Author: Jonathan Gornall (freelance journalist)
The British Medical Journal (BMJ) published an in-depth article on the GAPA-WHO Statement of Concern issued on February 2013. This BMJ piece received a very positive supporting statement in the form of a rapid response from WHO Director General Dr. Margaret Chan, which you can see in the following link:
http://www.bmj.com/content/346/bmj.f1889?tab=responses
On October 8th 2012, thirteen of world’s largest alcohol producers issued a set of commitments to reduce the harmful use of alcohol worldwide, ostensibly in support of the World Health Organization’s 2010 Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol.
The Global Alcohol Policy Alliance (GAPA), as an independent coalition of public health professionals, health scientists and NGO representatives, submitted a public Statement of Concern to the WHO Secretariat in response to the activities of the global alcohol producers. Discussions on industry involvement at the AMPHORA project final conference have contributed to this document.
Health in the post - 2015 Agenda
Date added: | 04/15/2013 |
Date modified: | 05/27/2013 |
Filesize: | 1.21 MB |
Downloads: | 3414 |
Author: Global Thematic Consultation on Health
The ‘Health in the Post-2015 Agenda’ from the Global Thematic Consultation on Health (led by WHO and UNICEF) states that the post-2015 health agenda should:
1) Include specific health-related targets as part of other development sector goals.
2) Take a holistic, life-course approach to people’s health with an emphasis on health promotion and disease prevention.
3) Accelerate progress where MDG targets have not been achieved and set more ambitious targets for the period to come.
4) Address the growing burden of NCDs, mental illness, and other emerging health challenges.
This is the first time mental illness has been explicitly included in the Post-MDG agenda.