Photo: Retrieved from healthpolicy-watch.news
Excerpt from healthpolicy-watch.news
The burgeoning health issues of small island developing states – which are on the front lines of climate change, but also awash in handguns and ultra-processed food imports – is the focus of a high level ministerial meeting taking place in the Caribbean island of Barbados today and tomorrow.
The SIDS Ministerial Conference on NCDs and Mental Health, co-sponsored by the World Health Organization, has brought together more than three dozen small island states that face not only climate precarity, but also globally high levels of hypertension and obesity as well as mental health disorders – in a complex web of issues that is both unique but also representative of broader global trends in unhealthy foods, environments and lifestyles.
The conference also represents a first attempt by WHO to more squarely confront what it calls the “commercial determinants of health” – such as the enormous dependence of small and isolated states on big food imports that are leading to more and more chronic diseases.
“We are not just the canaries in the mines for the climate crisis,” asserted Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley at the opening session Tuesday evening. She asserted that her “Bridgetown Agenda” for financial reform aimed at low- and middle-income countries was also critical to reforming development policies, agriculture and trade so as to allow SIDS countries to become more healthy, sustainable and self-sufficient.