G
lobal health is at the threshold of a new era. Few times
in his
-
tory has the world faced challenges as complex as those now posed by a
trio of threats: first, the unfinished agenda of infections, undernutrition,
and reproductive health problems; second, the rising global burden of noncommu
-
nicable diseases and their associated risk factors, such as smoking and obesity; and
third, the challenges arising from globalization itself, such as the health effects of
climate change and trade policies, which demand engagement outside the tradi
-
tional health sector.
1
These threats are evolving within a multifaceted and dynamic
global context characterized by great diversity among societies in norms, values,
and interests, as well as by large inequalities in the distribution of health risks and
the resources to address them.
Global health is at the threshold of a new era. Few timesin his-tory has the world faced challenges as complex as those now posed by a trio of threats: first, the unfinished agenda of infections, undernutrition, and reproductive health problems; second, the rising global burden of noncommu-nicable diseases and their associated risk factors, such as smoking and obesity; and third, the challenges arising from globalization itself, such as the health effects of climate change and trade policies, which demand engagement outside the tradi-tional health sector.1 These threats are evolving within a multifaceted and dynamic global context characterized by great diversity among societies in norms, values, and interests, as well as by large inequalities in the distribution of health risks and the resources to address them.
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