| Literature DB >> 32375804 |
Mahnaz Afshari1, Ahmad Ahmadi Teymourlouy2, Mohsen Asadi-Lari3, Mohammadreza Maleki1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) are one of the main challenges of healthcare systems around the world. In addition to the technical level, it requires political negotiations and solutions, such as global health diplomacy (GHD), which involves the participation of a wide range of actors and stakeholders and innovative international health partnerships. This review aimed to draw lessons for strengthening linkages with a wide range of actors and stakeholders from the GHD literature for NCDs, and how policymakers and political leaders can effectively use international health partnerships to beat NCDs.Entities:
Keywords: Diplomacy; Global Health; International cooperation; Noncommunicable diseases; Policymaking; Review [publication type]
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32375804 PMCID: PMC7201808 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-020-00572-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 4.185
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram: Database search and article selection process
Characteristics of studies on GHD for NCDs
| Author | Country/Region | Year | Journal | Level of Diplomacy | Domain | article type | Method | key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospedales et al. [ | CARICOM* | 2011 | Pan American Journal of Public Health | Regional | Advocacy, Political Factors | Commentary and perspectives | Qualitative- opinion piece on the process of and lessons learned in achieving the political commitment of heads of government manifested by a one-day summit on the prevention and control of NCDs* | Implementation of the NCD Summit Declaration mandates was most effective in larger countries with greater capacity, but countries of all sizes performed well, when they had regional or global support. Progress was limited in regional approaches to food security, labeling, and elimination of trans fats. Inadequate funding stymied several resource-dependent interventions. Monitoring mechanisms were established, but more concrete goals are needed, especially for actions of non-health government agencies |
| Lencucha et al. [ | Canada | 2010 | Health Policy and Planning | Global | NGOs, GHD, FCTC, International Negotiations, Global Health Governance | Original study | Grounded theory—qualitative data from public documents and in-depth interviews with participants from the government and NGOs* | Five key activities or roles of the Canadian NGOs during the negotiation of the FCTC*: monitoring, lobbying, brokering knowledge, offering technical expertise and fostering inclusion. |
| Blouin [ | – | 2012 | Administrative Sciences | Global | Global Health, Diplomacy, NCDs, Chronic Diseases, Policy, Global Collective Action | Review | Review—social sciences literature on policymaking at the domestic and international level | Adopting a global strategy with partners to increase media coverage. key role of civil society organizations in a strong collective response |
| Lee [ | Brazil | 2010 | PLoS Medicine | National/ Global | NGOs, GHD*, FCTC, International Negotiations | Original study | key informant interviews with Brazilian policymakers, diplomats, and public health advocates on the country’s role in FCTC negotiations, literature review of priary and secondary sources | providing leadership throughout the negotiation process |
| Blouin & Dubé [ | – | 2010 | Journal of Public Health Policy | Global | Obesity Prevention, NGOs, GHD, FCTC, International Negotiations | Review | Review of documents and studies— a simple analytical framework is used: (1) the specific problem requiring global collective action, (2) key actors, (3) their interests in the problem, (4) potential negotiation process, and (5) potential scenarios for collective action | require a much stronger engagement with developing countries |
| Mamudu & Glantz [ | – | 2009 | Global Public Health | Global | Civil Society, GHD, FCTC, International Negotiations | Original study | Interview and triangulation of archival documents and | Using proper strategies including publication of a newsletter, shaming, symbolism and media advocacy by the FCA to influence policy positions of countries during the FCTC negotiation. |
| Teixeira et al. [ | Brazil | 2017 | Cadernos de Saúde Pública | National/ Global | Civil Society, GHD, FCTC, International Negotiations | Original study | Kingdon’s perspective | The link between tobacco-related healthcare measures by technically skilled officials, the involvement of the high echelon of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (policy flow), the initiative for the establishment of the WHO*-FCTC (problem flow), and the existence of a favorable environment in executive and legislative (political flow), opened a opportunity window for WHO-FCTC approval and its inclusion in the government decision agenda. |
| Sener [ | – | 2014 | American Journal of Surgery | Global | Medical Diplomacy, Tobacco Control, Breast Health | Commentary and perspectives | Qualitative | Unprecedented presence and participation of NGOs in the drafting stages was helpful for starting negotiations for the treaty |
| Smith & Irwin [ | India | 2016 | Globalization and Health | National/ Global | Food and Non-alcoholic Beverages to Children, GHD, International Negotiations | Commentary and perspectives | Ethnographic study, in-depth interviews | a successful GHD in international level is part of a process, not the end, and an important part of conducting and evaluating GHD is a consideration of challenges and barriers concerning national action. |
| Pearlman et al. [ | – | 2016 | Science & Diplomacy | Global | GHD, Cancer, Multi-stakeholder collaborations, NCDs | case study | Document review and evidence-based survey | overcome many barriers with Effective partnership and careful coordination |
| Wipfli & Samet [ | – | 2012 | Tobacco Control | Global | GHD, FCTC, International Negotiations | Commentary and perspectives | Extending the lessons learned from tobacco control to NCD control | The collective response to NCDs should centralize on generating multisectoral evidence about the transnational factors influencing the rise in NCDs and their risk factors. |
| Juma et al. [ | Kenya, South Africa, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Malawi | 2018 | BMC Public Health | National/ Regional | Multi-sectoral Action | multiple case study | Document reviews and key informant interviews, McQueen’s framework for intersectoral governance | The need for mechanisms including approaches to capacity building and resource production to be able to take multi-sectoral measures in policy development, implementation and monitoring of NCD results. |
| Dain [ | – | 2018 | International Journal of Health Policy and Management | Global | Civil Society Networks, Coalition Building, Advocacy, Governance, Human Sustainable Development | Commentary and perspectives | Shiffman’s ‘Four Challenges that Global Health Networks Face’ | NCDA’s* advocacy has contributed to the call for global political commitment. |
| Russell et al. [ | – | 2018 | Global Public Health | Global | GHD, E-cigarettes, FCTC, International Law | Original study | Ethnography method | One of the important tasks of the FCA is to prepare policy brief on key issues. |
| Frech [ | Latin America | 2018 | Journal of Global Oncology | Regional/ Global | Cancer Research and Control, Partnerships and Diplomacy | Commentary and perspectives | Qualitative | The need for high-level cooperation (the President’s commitment), the sharing of information to support the efficient use of limited resources, the prevention of repeated attempts, and the synergy of current investments in specific countries are essential. |
| Beaglehole [ | – | 2011 | Lancet | Global | UN* High-Level Meeting on NCDs, Global Crisis, Need for Global Response, International Cooperation, Monitoring and Accountability | Commentary and perspectives | Report- providing evidence for the realities of the NCD situation, summaries key messages for heads of state and governments. | Long-term success requires inspiring and committed national and international leadership, improving primary health care, effective use of existing resources, new financing methods. |
| Nishtar et al. [ | – | 2018 | Lancet | Global | WHO Independent High-level Commission on NCDs, National Response to NCDs, International Cooperation | Commentary and perspectives | This report represented rich and diverse views and perspectives. | Ensureing implementation through legislation, regulation and standards or investment. Health in all policies, approaches of the whole government, the whole society and intersectoral approaches must be taken in the field of NCDs actions. Need technical support, training, practical research and capacity building initiatives. |
| Samuels & Hospedales [ | CARICOM | 2011 | West Indian Medical Journal | Regional/ Global | Heads of government, UN High-Level Meeting on NCDs | Commentary and perspectives | Report | commit to strengthening systems and incrising resources, endorse and implement the commitments made and identify and support leadership for sustained action and accountability for these initiatives. |
| Hatefi et al. [ | – | 2018 | Bulletin of the World Health Organization | Global | Global Susceptibility to NCDs, Accountability | Commentary and perspectives | Perspectives on rational response to global health risks | The main response to NCDs must happen downstream at the country level. |
| Wickramasinghe et al. [ | Lebanon, Morocco, Sudan, and Yemen | 2018 | Global Health Action | National/ Regional | Multisectoral Action, National-level stakeholders | original study | Structured interviews with key stakeholders | Achievement to national multisectoral action plans development through collaboration and good technical support. |
| Mendis [ | – | 2010 | British Medical Bulletin | Global | Policies to Support Regulatory, Legislative, Intersectoral Action | Commentary and perspectives | Qualitative review | Needed to develop innovative approaches for revenue generation for prevention and control of NCDs. Adapted agenda concering the context of contries. |
| Maher & Sridhar [ | – | 2012 | Journal of Global Health | Global | Global Fight Against NCDs, global health policy communities, political leaders | discipline configurative case study | Qualitative -Shiffman’s 2009 political priority framework | Engaging the diverse actors for the global proliferation of NCDs. |
| Gneiting & Schmitz [ | – | 2016 | Health Policy and Planning | Global | Advocacy, Political Factors, Network Formation and Evolution in International Health Governance | Original study | In-depth qualitative analysis, in-depth examination of social and political processes with a paired comparison | global health networks (individuals to a global coalition of membership) are engaging in advocacy on a given health problem. |
| Magnusson [ | – | 2007 | Globalization and Health | Global | Global Health Governance | Commentary and perspectives | Report | Needed to broader framework of reference for lifestyle-related NCDs |
| Battams & Townsend [ | – | 2018 | Critical Public Health | Global/ nation | trade policy, policy coherence, social determinants of health, advocacy | original study | Interviews with key actors working across trade and health sectors | Support for advocacy coalitions operating basedn upon trade and geopolitical interests. Lobbying trade policy actors proactively and benefit from linking with global advocacy networks as a way to counter the power and resources of industries with NCD risk areas. |
| Kirton et al. [ | CARICOM | 2018 | Pan American Journal of Public Health | Regional/global | Port of Spain Summit Declaration, global and regional action | Original study | Using data from published literature, primary documents, and semistructured interviews (a method developed by the University of Toronto’s Global Governance Program) | requirement to embed NCDs in a whole-of-global-governance approach, monitor implementation annually, develop transregional partnerships, engage civil society and support regular regional and global summits |
| Greaves et al. [ | CARICOM | 2018 | Pan American Journal of Public Health | Regional | Port of Spain Summit Declaration, Health communication | Commentary and perspectives | Report and review | the NCDs advocate should be considered as knowledge broker performing tasks related to effective knowledge transfer, networking and capacity building |
| Chattu et al. [ | CARICOM | 2019 | Health Promotion Perspectives | Global | Port of Spain Summit Declaration, outcome of GHD | review | systematic review | Impact of the NCDs regional summit declaration on global attention to the Prevention and Control of NCDs. |
| McBride et al. [ | – | 2019 | BMC Public Health | Global | GHD, Soft power, Global health agenda-setting, SDGs*, BRICS, G7, G20 | Original study | Content analysis to review the health ministerial communiqués issued by the political clubs after the SDGs were adopted at the UN General Assembly of September 2015 | The global health leadership of the BRICS, G7 and G20 represents an exercise of soft power and GHD on NCDs and their risk factors. |
| Collins et al. [ | – | 2019 | The bmj | Global | development cooperation, global action, | Commentary and perspectives | Report and review | Development South-South and triangular cooperation beyond North-South development assistance. |
* noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), global health diplomacy (GHD), United Nations (UN), World Health Organization (WHO), non-governmental organizations (NGOs), The Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), noncommunicable diseases alliance (NCDA), Sustainable development goals (SDGs)
Fig. 2Frequency distribution of studies on GHD for NCDs
Analytical framework for examining negotiations
| Themes | Subthemes |
|---|---|
| (1) The specific problem requiring global collective action | - Globalization of marketing and advertising strategies - Sanctions, including financial, travel and trade restrictions - Multinational companies undermining the regulatory authority of national governments through public relations and lobbying strategies, and the need to develop coordinated strategies and diplomatic initiatives to address the multinational nature of the problem - GHD on obesity and tobacco control requires stronger engagement with developing countries - The need for collective action against NCDs given the current migration and travel patterns - Smuggling - Trade liberalization, including a reduction in trade barriers and prices to increase competition in the international market - New global challenges such as climate change |
| (2) Key actors | - United Nations and associated agencies and groups, including the WHO and the Independent High-level Commission on NCDs, and groups and important political clubs such as G7, G8/ BRICS - the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) - the World Bank - the World Trade Organisation (WTO) - the Codex Alimentarius Commission - Heads of government - National governments and ministries (e.g. health, foreign policy, education, finance, labor, etc.) - Regional coalitions of countries - International Diabetes Federation - World Heart Federation - Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) - Health advocacy groups, NGOs, and humanitarian organizations - International professional associations - Commercial actors (e.g. pharmaceutical companies, a variety of businesses involved in the production, processing, distribution, marketing, and sales of food and beverage) - Civil society organizations and coalitions (e.g. Nutrition Foundation, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention, National Cancer Institute) - Healthcare regulatory agencies - Parliamentary Committee for Prevention and Control of NCDs - National Inter-ministerial Tobacco Control Committee - NCD Alliance, Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, and Union for International Cancer Control - Research centers and the academia - The medical community - The private sector - Patients and their families - International donors |
| (3) Actors’ interests in the problem | - UN and WHO: technical support, non-binding recommendations and policy advice, international legal obligations and laws, advocacy - Groups and political clubs such as G7, G8/ BRICS: Supporting reforms, develop framwork for regulation, support growth and development across globe, Strengthen international cooperation - Governmental actors: governments represent power in diplomacy, while NGOs represent ideas and knowledge - NGOs: monitoring, lobbying, brokering knowledge, offering technical expertise, and fostering inclusion; NGOs act as a catalyst to the process of developing policies and drive it by including stakeholders, offering technical expertise, and providing financial assistance; multisectoral partnerships aimed at capacity-building and strengthening health systems - Industrial actors: reduced market share and profits due to measures to limit tobacco use - Unions: advocacy of NCD Alliance to trigger a global policy response, the role of Framework Convention Alliance (FCA) in agenda-setting for tobacco control - Policy champions: strong supportive role |
| (4) Potential negotiation process | - Scientific and technical capacity building - Preparation for negotiations, mobilization of civil society organizations, dialogue with industry, consultation with experts, and sharing of information among national health agencies - Entering the negotiating forum - Monitoring, lobbying, brokering knowledge, offering technical expertise, and fostering inclusion |
| (5) Potential scenarios for collective action | - Drawing attention to issues that are not yet on the GHD agenda or are largely overlooked - Political leadership, strong mobilization, and advocacy from well-organized groups globally are crucial in triggering and sustaining a global policy response such as an international treaty - A monitoring role that involves publicizing the diplomatic process |
Prevention and control of NCDs at different levels of the GHD Pyramid
| Actor | Tool (Process) | Content | Context | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core Diplomacy | - UN - WHO - the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) - the World Bank - the World Trade Organisation (WTO) - the Codex Alimentarius Commission - Independent High-level Commission on NCDs - Heads of government - International professional associations - International Diabetes Federation - World Heart Federation - Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) - The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) | - Policy brief - Technical support - Exchange of experiences at the international level - Knowledge generation International legal obligations and laws - non-binding recommendations and policy advice - advocacy | - UN High-Level Meeting on Prevention and Control of NCDs - WHO Global NCD Action Plan - WHO Global Monitoring Framework for NCDs - Recognition of NCDs as a major challenge to sustainable development - Alliances, treaties, and other agreements - FCTC - Regional Action Plan for Prevention and Control of NCDs - Port of Spain Summit Declaration “Uniting to Stop the Epidemic of Chronic NCDs” - WHO Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health - Global Code of Practice on the Marketing of Unhealthy Food and Beverages to Children - Resolutions WHA63.14: Marketing of Foods and Non-alcoholic Beverages to Children - MPOWER Package - Best Buys - 2017 WHO Cancer Resolution - WHO Mental Health Action Plan - Montevideo Roadmap 2018–2030 on NCDs as a Sustainable Development Priority - The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness | - Need for network formation at regional and international levels - Lack of resources at national and international levels - Effect of the political will of politicians - The instrumental use of GHD to achieve other foreign policy and diplomatic goals - Differences in wealth, incidence and prevalence of NCDs, and method of disease control |
| Multi-stakeholder diplomacy | - Ministry of Health - Ministry of Industry - Ministry of Agriculture - Ministry of Education - Ministry of Urban Development - Ministry of Sports - Environmental organizations - Media - The academia - Commercial actors - Civil society organizations and coalition - Healthcare regulatory agencies - Nutrition Foundation - National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention, National Cancer Institute - Parliamentary Committee for Prevention and Control of NCDs - National Inter-ministerial Tobacco Control Committee | - Advocacy - Scientific research - Health in All Policies - Clear guidelines to strengthen coordination mechanisms - Whole-of-government approach - Publication of a newsletter, shaming, and symbolism - Media advocacy to influence policy positions of countries during negotiations - Holding scientific conferences | - National Document on Prevention and Control of NCDs - Agreements between ministries - National Plan for Tobacco Control - Development plans | - Advocacy varies across different governments and ministries (different cultures) - Programs developed to change systems and cultures (e.g. lifestyle changes) require sustainable medical and political leadership - A single plan is not responsive for all countries and different contexts - Significant difference between low-income countries and the global context - Political obstacles, including sanctions - Geographical location, communication, and health infrastructure - Language barriers and the need to translate tools to native languages - Health-related socioeconomic factors are not limited to the public health sector alone and exist in other sectors of the health system, highlighting the need for multi-sectoral action - Poverty and social factors affecting health - Implementing changes for cancer control that are tailored to a specific context, society, and culture - NCDs threaten economic and human development |
| Informal Diplomacy | - NCD Alliance - Research centers and academic associations - The medical community - The private sector - Patients and their families - International donors - NGOs - Health advocacy groups, NGOs, and humanitarian organizations - National Cancer Institute | - Media - Campaigns against alcohol and tobacco use - National Campaign for Tobacco Control and Smoking Cessation - Specific activities such as games for the elderly - World No Tobacco Day | - NCD Advocacy Document | - Understanding the historical context of negotiations - Any country is several markets rather than one, with a wide variety of marketing types |