She described NCDs as a medical condition which were chronic in nature, non contagious and could lead to deformity or death.
Ebola health
workers rest outside a quarantine zone at a Red Cross facility in the
town of Koidu, Kono district in Eastern Sierra Leone December 19, 2014.
REUTERS/Baz Ratner
Nigerians might be spending more
than three per cent of their healthcare budgets on the management of
non-communicable diseases in the next 10 years if they do not embark on
adequate nutrition and decent lifestyles.
Dr Chika
Ndiokwelu, a consultant nutritionist and dietician on said this on
Wednesday that at a one-day workshop on: ``Adequate Nutrition and
Lifestyle : Essential for Prevention of Non-Communicable Diseases(NCDs).
Ndiokwelu
speaking at the event organised by Coca-Cola Ccompany said that
adequate nutrition and positive lifestyles were essential to reduce the
risk factors of NDCs.
She described NCDs as a medical condition which were chronic in nature, non contagious and could lead to deformity or death.
She said that these diseases represented a major threat to health and development in the 21st century.
"NDCs account for 60 per cent of all deaths globally and 43 per cent of disease burden.
"There
are four major NDCs - cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), cancer, chronic
respiratory diseases and diabetes mellitus. They are the world's biggest
killers as they account for 36 million deaths annually."
"In
Nigeria situation, estimation shows that more than three per cent of
healthcare cost will form the management of non-communicable diseases in
the next 10 years," she said.
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