A/RES/80/117 GA
Political Declaration of the 4th High-Level Meeting of the General Assembly on the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases and the Promotion of Mental Health and Well-being : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
80
Session
175
Yes
2
No
1
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/80/L.34 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/80/117 |
| Category | HEALTH |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/80/117 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/80/PV.64
-
Albania
-
Algeria
-
Andorra
-
Angola
-
Antigua and Barbuda
-
Armenia
-
Australia
-
Austria
-
Azerbaijan
-
Bahamas
-
Bahrain
-
Bangladesh
-
Barbados
-
Belarus
-
Belgium
-
Belize
-
Bhutan
-
Bosnia and Herzegovina
-
Botswana
-
Brazil
-
Brunei Darussalam
-
Bulgaria
-
Burkina Faso
-
Burundi
-
Cabo Verde
-
Cambodia
-
Cameroon
-
Canada
-
Central African Republic
-
Chad
-
Chile
-
China
-
Colombia
-
Comoros
-
Congo
-
Costa Rica
-
Côte d'Ivoire
-
Croatia
-
Cuba
-
Cyprus
-
Czechia
-
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
-
Democratic Republic of the Congo
-
Denmark
-
Djibouti
-
Dominican Republic
-
Ecuador
-
Egypt
-
El Salvador
-
Equatorial Guinea
-
Eritrea
-
Estonia
-
Ethiopia
-
Fiji
-
Finland
-
France
-
Gabon
-
Gambia
-
Georgia
-
Germany
-
Greece
-
Grenada
-
Guatemala
-
Guinea
-
Guinea-Bissau
-
Guyana
-
Haiti
-
Honduras
-
Hungary
-
Iceland
-
India
-
Indonesia
-
Islamic Republic of Iran
-
Iraq
-
Ireland
-
Italy
-
Jamaica
-
Japan
-
Jordan
-
Kazakhstan
-
Kenya
-
Kuwait
-
Kyrgyzstan
-
Lao People's Democratic Republic
-
Latvia
-
Lebanon
-
Lesotho
-
Liberia
-
Libya
-
Liechtenstein
-
Lithuania
-
Luxembourg
-
Malawi
-
Malaysia
-
Maldives
-
Mali
-
Malta
-
Marshall Islands
-
Mauritania
-
Mauritius
-
Mexico
-
Micronesia (Federated States of)
-
Monaco
-
Mongolia
-
Montenegro
-
Morocco
-
Mozambique
-
Myanmar
-
Namibia
-
Nepal
-
Netherlands
-
New Zealand
-
Nicaragua
-
Niger
-
Nigeria
-
North Macedonia
-
Norway
-
Oman
-
Pakistan
-
Palau
-
Panama
-
Papua New Guinea
-
Peru
-
Philippines
-
Poland
-
Portugal
-
Qatar
-
Republic of Korea
-
Moldova
-
Romania
-
Russian Federation
-
Rwanda
-
Saint Kitts and Nevis
-
Saint Lucia
-
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
-
Samoa
-
San Marino
-
Saudi Arabia
-
Senegal
-
Serbia
-
Seychelles
-
Sierra Leone
-
Singapore
-
Slovakia
-
Slovenia
-
Solomon Islands
-
South Africa
-
Spain
-
Sri Lanka
-
Sudan
-
Suriname
-
Sweden
-
Switzerland
-
Tajikistan
-
Thailand
-
Timor-Leste
-
Togo
-
Tonga
-
Trinidad and Tobago
-
Tunisia
-
Türkiye
-
Turkmenistan
-
Tuvalu
-
Uganda
-
Ukraine
-
United Arab Emirates
-
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
-
United Republic of Tanzania
-
Uruguay
-
Uzbekistan
-
Vanuatu
-
Viet Nam
-
Yemen
-
Zambia
-
Zimbabwe
Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/80/117
General Assembly
Distr.: General
18 December 2025
25-20712 (E)
*2520712*
Eightieth session
Agenda item 127
Global health and foreign policy
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 15 December 2025
[without reference to a Main Committee (A/80/L.34)]
80/117. Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of
noncommunicable diseases and the promotion of mental health
and well-being
The General Assembly
Adopts the following political declaration, as the outcome of intergovernmental
negotiations in advance of and considered by the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases and
the promotion of mental health and well-being, held on 25 September 2025.
64th plenary meeting
15 December 2025
Annex
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the General Assembly
on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases and the promotion
of mental health and well-being
Equity and integration: transforming lives and livelihoods through leadership
and action on noncommunicable diseases and the promotion of mental health
and well-being
We, Heads of State and Government and representatives of States and
Governments, assembled at the United Nations on 25 September 2025 to review
progress achieved in the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases and the
promotion of mental health and well-being, commit to accelerating the
implementation of a priority set of evidence-based, cost-effective and affordable
actions, and in this regard we:
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
2/14
1.
Strongly reaffirm our commitment to reduce by one third premature
mortality from noncommunicable diseases by 2030 through the prevention and
control of noncommunicable diseases, and the promotion of mental health and well-
being, by accelerating the implementation of the political declarations and outcome
document approved by the previous high-level meetings of the General Assembly on
the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases held in 2011, 1 20142 and
2018;3
2.
Reaffirm General Assembly resolution 70/1 of 25 September 2015,
entitled “Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”,
stressing the need for a comprehensive and people-centred approach, with a view to
leaving no one behind, reaching the furthest behind first, and the importance of health
across all the goals and targets of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,
which are integrated and indivisible;
3.
Reaffirm General Assembly resolution 69/313 of 27 July 2015 on the
Addis Ababa Action Agenda of the Third International Conference on Financing for
Development, which reaffirmed a strong political commitment to address the
challenge of financing and creating an enabling environment at all levels for
sustainable development in the spirit of global partnership and solidarity, as well as
General Assembly resolution 79/323 of 25 August 2025 on the Sevilla Commitment
of the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development;
4.
Reaffirm the right of every human being, without distinction of any kind,
to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health and
recognize that health is a precondition for, and an outcome and indicator of, all three
dimensions of sustainable development;
5.
Recall the political declarations of the high-level meetings of the General
Assembly on universal health coverage held in 2019 4 and 2023, 5 on pandemic
prevention, preparedness and response in 2023,6 on the fight against tuberculosis in
20237 and on antimicrobial resistance in 2024,8 as appropriate;
6.
Further recall the preparatory meetings, including global and regional
conferences and other technical meetings on noncommunicable diseases and mental
health, convened in preparation for the present and prior high-level meetings;
7.
Take note with appreciation of the report of the Secretary-General entitled
“Progress on the prevention and control of non‑communicable diseases and the
promotion of mental health and well-being”,9 and recognize that, while some progress
has been made and some countries are on track to meet individual targets, there are
many areas where greater action is needed, using a whole-of-government and whole-
of-society approach;
8.
Emphasize the burden of noncommunicable diseases, which, together,
account for more than 43 million deaths each year, 18 million of which occur
prematurely (before the age of 70) and include cardiovascular diseases – which
account for the largest share of these deaths – cancers, diabetes and chronic
_______________
1 Resolution 66/2, annex.
2 Resolution 68/300.
3 Resolution 73/2.
4 Resolution 74/2.
5 Resolution 78/4, annex.
6 Resolution 78/3, annex.
7 Resolution 78/5, annex.
8 Resolution 79/2, annex.
9 A/79/762.
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
3/14
25-20712
respiratory diseases, while recognizing the burden of conditions beyond these four
main noncommunicable diseases;
9.
Note with concern that there are: (a) 1.3 billion adults living with
hypertension and only one in five have it under control; (b) 800 million adults living
with diabetes; (c) one in five people developing cancer during their lifetime, with
20 million new cases annually, of which 400,000 are children; (d) 3.7 billion people
suffering from oral diseases; (e) more than 674 million people affected by chronic
kidney disease; and (f) over 300 million persons living with rare diseases;
10. Emphasize that mental health conditions, including anxiety, depression
and psychosis, affect close to 1 billion people worldwide and can commonly co-occur
and interact with other neurological conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease and
other forms of dementia, stroke sequelae, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy and other
noncommunicable diseases, as well as substance abuse, and that suicide is the third
leading cause of death among those 15 to 29 years old;
11. Recognize that noncommunicable diseases and mental health and well-
being are closely intertwined with brain health and neurological conditions, that
mental health conditions and neurological conditions contribute to the global
incidence and impact of noncommunicable diseases and that persons living with
mental health conditions and neurological conditions also have an increased risk of
other noncommunicable diseases and therefore have higher rates of morbidity and
mortality;
12. Recognize also that the main modifiable risk factors of noncommunicable
diseases are tobacco use, harmful use of alcohol, unhealthy diets, physical inactivity
and air pollution and are largely preventable and require cross-sectoral actions;
13. Emphasize with concern that, globally, there are: (a) 1.3 billion tobacco
users and more than 7 million tobacco-related deaths each year, including an
estimated 1.6 million non‑smokers who are exposed to second-hand smoke;
(b) 2.6 million deaths each year attributable to alcohol consumption; (c) 35 million
children under 5 years of age currently overweight; (d) 390 million children 5 to
19 years old who are overweight or obese, while adult obesity has more than doubled
since 1990; and (e) nearly 7 million deaths each year caused by air pollution, with
99 per cent of the population exposed to unsafe air pollution levels;
14. Emphasize that noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions
prevent people and communities from reaching their full potential, pose a heavy
economic burden, limit human capital development, can undermine the sustainability
of health systems and, together with other health conditions, compound cycles of
poverty and disadvantage;
15. Recognize that the human and economic cost of noncommunicable
diseases and mental health conditions contributes to poverty and inequalities and
threatens the health of peoples and the development of countries, and that there are
public health risks associated with increased urbanization, including unhealthy diets,
malnutrition and hunger, sedentary lifestyles and physical inactivity, requiring
commitments to mobilize and allocate adequate, predictable and sustained resources
for national responses to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases, including
through international cooperation and official development assistance;
16. Recognize also that noncommunicable diseases, mental health conditions
and their underlying risk factors and determinants affect people at all ages, including
children and young people;
17. Recognize further the increasing gap between life expectancy and healthy
life expectancy for older persons and note that, despite the progress achieved at the
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
4/14
global level, many health systems continue to be inadequately prepared to identify
and respond to the growing needs of the rapidly ageing population, including the
increased prevalence of noncommunicable diseases;
18. Acknowledge that mainstreaming a gender perspective into the prevention
and control of noncommunicable diseases is crucial to understanding and addressing
health risks and needs of women and men of all ages, giving particular attention to
the impact of noncommunicable diseases on women in all settings;
19. Recognize that, globally, women comprise approximately 70 per cent of
the health workforce, and further recognize that women face a double
noncommunicable disease burden, often acting as caregivers for the sick and facing
other structural barriers that hinder timely noncommunicable disease prevention,
screening, diagnosis and treatment;
20. Recognize that persons with disabilities are at increased risk of
noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions and often face
disproportionate discrimination, stigma and exclusion from accessing health services,
and that noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions are leading causes
of years lived with a disability;
21. Recognize also that the poorest, the socioeconomically disadvantaged and
those in vulnerable situations, including those in conflict, emergency and
humanitarian settings, and those living in areas most vulnerable to climate change,
often bear a disproportionate burden of noncommunicable diseases and mental health
conditions, that there are unique vulnerabilities for people living in developing
countries, including in small island developing States, where noncommunicable
diseases are increasingly becoming the main cause of mortality, and that small island
developing States have among the highest rates of obesity worldwide and are
disproportionately represented among the countries with the highest risk of dying
prematurely from noncommunicable diseases;
22. Recognize further that, since the adoption of the political declaration in
2018, issues such as the coronavirus disease (COVID‑19) pandemic, humanitarian
emergencies, natural disasters and extreme weather events, conflicts, increasing debt
challenges and other intersected crises have strained macroeconomic conditions and
fiscal capacity, especially for developing countries, and directly impacted health and
well-being and introduced additional pressures on national responses to
noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions;
23. Recognize that the COVID‑19 pandemic disproportionately impacted
people living with noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions and that
many health systems were heavily disrupted and not adequately prepared to
effectively respond to these conditions during the pandemic, demonstrating the
importance of investing in resilient health systems and healthy populations;
24. Recognize the threat and challenge posed by antimicrobial resistance in
the treatment of certain noncommunicable diseases, such as cancers, cardiovascular
diseases, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases, and the need for integrated
policies and strategies that promote disease prevention and safeguard the reliable
access, stewardship and effectiveness of antimicrobials across health systems
aligning, as appropriate, with the global action plan on antimicrobial resistance; 10
25. Recognize that achieving universal health coverage is essential for the
prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases, including through integrated,
sustainable, resilient and well-financed health systems for health promotion,
_______________
10 World Health Organization, document WHA68/2015/REC/1, annex 3.
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
5/14
25-20712
prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment, care and rehabilitation for people living
with, or at elevated risk of, noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions,
focusing on a primary health care approach, while recognizing the importance of well-
functioning referral systems, to connect primary health care with secondary and
tertiary health care for conditions that require specialized services;
26. Recognize further the fundamental role of primary health care in achieving
universal health coverage, as was declared in the Declaration of Alma-Ata of 1978
and the Declaration of Astana on primary health care of 2018, and further reaffirm the
importance of primary health care as an effective and efficient approach to enhancing
people’s physical and mental health, as well as social well-being, noting the need to
unite efforts through the global coalition on primary health care to take coordinated
action in delivering high-quality, safe, integrated and accessible health services at the
primary care level, including in remote geographical regions or in areas difficult to
access;
27. Reaffirm the importance of national ownership and the primary role and
responsibility of governments at all levels to determine their own path in responding
to the challenge of noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions,
underscore the importance of pursuing whole-of-government and whole-of-society
approaches, and acknowledge that all stakeholders, including civil society, the private
sector and people living with noncommunicable diseases and mental health
conditions, play a role and can contribute to creating an environment conducive to
preventing and controlling noncommunicable diseases and promoting mental health
and well-being, and mobilizing all available resources, as appropriate, for the
implementation of national responses;
28. Recognize the importance of fully respecting human rights, including the
rights of Indigenous Peoples, in line with national contexts, in the prevention and
control of noncommunicable diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-
being, and ensuring that no one is left behind, including for access to services and
care, acknowledging that people living with and at risk of these conditions are often
unjustly deprived of such access and may encounter discrimination and inconsiderate
treatment;
29. Recognize also that people living with noncommunicable diseases and
mental health conditions, their families and caregivers have unique experiences and
have first-hand expertise to contribute to designing, implementing and monitoring
health promotion, prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care (including rehabilitation
and palliation) policies and programmes;
30. Acknowledge
that
there
are
cost-effective
and
evidence-based
interventions for preventing, screening, diagnosing, treating and caring for people
living with or at elevated risk of noncommunicable diseases and mental health
conditions, while also acknowledging that scarce resources and increasing prices of
certain health products and services mean that Member States must prioritize the most
affordable and feasible interventions, which, for the most part, can be delivered at
community and primary health care level based on context-specific considerations;
31. Recognize the value of high-quality research and evidence to inform
effective and innovative prevention and treatment of noncommunicable diseases and
mental health conditions, while noting with concern that access to the benefits of
research and innovation, such as quality, safe, efficacious and affordable diagnostics
and treatment, remains challenging, especially for developing countries;
32. Acknowledge that investing, as appropriate, in the World Health
Organization “best buys” aims to save close to 7 million lives, resulting in 50 million
additional years of healthy life, and that these outcomes can be achieved with a return
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
6/14
on investment of at least 7 United States dollars by 2030 for every dollar spent,
resulting in more than 230 billion dollars in economic benefits between now and 2030;
33. Emphasize the importance of addressing the digital divide in health,
between and within countries, to facilitate access to digital health technologies to
address noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions and prevent the
exacerbation of health inequities, and in this regard acknowledge the pressing need to
address the major impediments that countries, particularly developing countries, face
in accessing and developing digital technologies, and highlight the importance of
financing and capacity-building;
34. Recognize the need to eradicate hunger and prevent all forms of
malnutrition
worldwide,
particularly
undernourishment,
stunting,
wasting,
underweight and overweight in children under 5 years of age and anaemia in women
and children, particularly girls, among other micronutrient deficiencies, ensure access
to healthy diets and reduce the burden of diet-related noncommunicable diseases in
all age groups;
35. Recognize further that breastfeeding fosters healthy growth and improves
cognitive development and has longer-term health benefits for both child and mother
such as reducing the risk of becoming overweight or obese and developing
noncommunicable diseases later in life;
36. Recognize also that obesity is driven by multiple factors, including the
unaffordability and unavailability of healthy diets, lack of physical activity, sleep
deprivation and stress;
37. Emphasize the need to prioritize affordable and evidenced-based actions
to fast-track progress in the next five years that build on demonstrative successes in
countries and maximize return on investment, and that data and indicators are
essential to monitor progress;
38. Recognize that multimorbidity and co-occurrence with diseases, including
infectious, vaccine-preventable and rare diseases, increases the complexity of early
diagnosis and treatment of noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions;
39. Recognize also that oral diseases are a major health and economic burden
in many countries and impact people across their lifetime, causing pain, discomfort,
disfigurement and even death, that untreated dental caries (tooth decay) in permanent
teeth is among the most common health conditions, and that oral diseases are largely
preventable and caused by a range of modifiable risk factors, requiring a continuing
focus on social, environmental and population strategies, and can contribute to other
noncommunicable diseases;
40. Recognize further that leadership, political commitment, action,
cooperation and coordination beyond the health sector are important to promote and
accelerate cost-effective, accessible and affordable population-level interventions to
promote healthy lifestyles and to prevent noncommunicable diseases and mental
health conditions;
We therefore commit to urgently:
41. Fast-track efforts to accelerate progress on noncommunicable diseases and
mental health and well-being over the next five years, focusing on tobacco and
nicotine control, preventing and scaling up the effective treatment of cardiovascular
risk factors, such as hypertension, and improving mental health care, with the aim to
reduce by one third premature mortality from noncommunicable diseases and achieve
the following global targets by 2030: 150 million fewer people are using tobacco;
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
7/14
25-20712
150 million more people have hypertension under control; and 150 million more
people have access to mental health care;
To deliver on our commitment to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases
and promote mental health and well-being, and in line with our respective national
contexts and where appropriate, we will:
Create health-promoting environments through action across government
42. Address key social, economic and environmental determinants of
noncommunicable diseases and mental health and the impact of economic,
commercial and market factors by: (a) eradicating poverty in all its forms and
dimensions, including extreme and multidimensional poverty, eliminating hunger and
malnutrition and ensuring healthy lives and well-being; (b) promoting universal
access to quality education and supportive living and learning environments from
childhood to adulthood; (c) promoting and creating safe, supportive and decent
working conditions; (d) providing universal, comprehensive and sustainable social
protection and livelihood support for low-income and impoverished people;
(e) promoting social connection and integration and addressing social exclusion and
isolation of people living with noncommunicable diseases and mental health
conditions, older persons, young people, persons with disabilities and those living in
rural and underserved areas; (f) addressing air, water and soil pollution, exposure to
hazardous chemicals, natural disasters and extreme weather events; (g) addressing
urban planning, including sustainable transportation and urban safety, to promote
physical activity by increasing the number of public spaces where persons across the
life course can be physically active; and (h) increasing access to affordable fruits and
vegetables and healthy diets;
43. Consider introducing or increasing taxes on tobacco and alcohol to support
health objectives, in line with national circumstances;
44. Encourage within national and, where relevant, regional contexts, as
appropriate, legislation and regulation, policies and actions to:
(a)
Significantly reduce tobacco and nicotine use by: (i) implementing health
warnings on all tobacco and nicotine packages; (ii) restricting tobacco and nicotine
advertising, promotion and sponsorship, including cross-border, as appropriate;
(iii) comprehensively reducing exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke in indoor and
outdoor workplaces, public places and public transport; and (iv) promoting safe and
evidence-based quitting programmes;
(b)
Regulate, as appropriate, electronic nicotine delivery systems and
electronic non‑nicotine delivery systems, heated tobacco products and nicotine
delivery products;
(c)
Accelerate implementation among Parties to the World Health
Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control 11 and its Protocol to
Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products, 12 without any tobacco industry
interference;
(d)
Support programmes that are aimed at combating undernutrition in
mothers, in particular during pregnancy and breastfeeding, and in children, and the
irreversible effects of chronic undernutrition in early childhood, in particular from
birth to the age of 2;
_______________
11 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 2302, No. 41032.
12 Ibid., vol. 3276, No. 55487.
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
8/14
(e)
Promote healthy diets and reduce unhealthy diets, overweight and obesity
through measures such as: (i) promoting the increased availability and affordability
of nutritious food and information on healthy eating, including through promoting
efficient, inclusive, resilient and sustainable agrifood systems; (ii) improving policies
and taking measures to reduce industrially produced trans-fatty acids to the lowest
level possible and reduce excessive levels of saturated fats, free sugars and sodium;
(iii) providing nutritional information to consumers, such as through front-of-pack
labelling; (iv) putting in place public food procurement and service policies for
healthy diets; (v) protecting children from the harmful impact of food marketing,
including digital marketing; (vi) protecting, promoting and supporting optimal
breastfeeding practices, including by regulating the marketing of breastmilk
substitutes; and (vii) promoting adequate physical activity, including sports and
recreation, and reducing sedentary behaviour, including through increasing access to
public spaces;
(f)
Reduce the harmful use of alcohol through accelerating the
implementation of the Global Strategy to Reduce the Harmful Use of Alcohol of 2010
and the global alcohol action plan 2022–2030, including by considering marketing
and availability measures;
(g)
Address the environmental determinants of health, including the exposure
to air pollution, by: (i) promoting clean, efficient, safe, accessible and expanded urban
public transport options, and active mobility, such as walking and cycling;
(ii) reducing the open and uncontrolled burning of toxic residues; (iii) promoting
access to affordable, clean, sustainable and less polluting solutions for cooking,
heating and electricity generation; (iv) developing, amending and administering
regulatory and non‑regulatory measures to tackle air pollution from industrial sectors,
vehicles, engines, fuels and consumer and commercial products; (v) reducing the
exposure, especially of children, to lead and hazardous and synthetic chemicals; and
(vi) strengthening and investing in more resilient health care systems, including
infrastructure, service delivery and workforce capacity;
(h)
Prevent and reduce suicides and take steps to decriminalize attempted
suicide, in line with national circumstances, by: (i) developing national suicide
prevention strategies and action plans; (ii) limiting access to means of suicide,
including highly hazardous pesticides; (iii) reducing stigma related to mental health
conditions and neurological disorders; (iv) creating an open environment to discuss
mental health; (v) fostering a public health approach; (vi) providing support to
persons affected by suicide and self-harm; (vii) promoting and supporting the
responsible reporting of suicide by the media, including online, digital and social; and
(viii) fostering life skills and support for young people;
(i)
Scale up efforts to develop, implement and evaluate policies and
programmes that promote healthy and active ageing and maintain and improve quality
of life of older persons, and to identify and respond to the growing needs of the rapidly
ageing population, including the need for preventive, curative, palliative and
specialized care for older persons, taking into account the disproportionate burden of
noncommunicable diseases on older persons, and that population ageing is a
contributing factor in the rising incidence and prevalence of noncommunicable
diseases;
45. Address the health risks related to digital technology, including social
media, such as excessive screen time, exposure to harmful content, social
disconnection, social isolation and loneliness, stressing the importance of updating
regulatory and educational systems to ensure that children and young people benefit
from the opportunities of digital services, that their human rights are protected online
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
9/14
25-20712
and offline and that they are protected from the potential negative impact that digital
services can have on their physical and mental health;
46. Increase health literacy and implement science- and evidence-based,
sustained best practice information and age-appropriate communication programmes,
across the entire population and life course, to: (a) educate the public about the harms
of tobacco and nicotine use, the harmful use of alcohol and air pollution; (b) promote
healthy diets such as through food and nutrition education; (c) promote physical
activity, including physical education and sports, and reduce children’s screen use,
with links to school and community-based programmes; and (d) promote healthy life
skills, social participation, resilience and mental health and well-being;
Target: at least 80 per cent of countries have implemented policies and legislative,
regulatory and fiscal measures to support health objectives related to the prevention
and control of noncommunicable diseases and promotion of mental health and well-
being, in line with national circumstances, by 2030.
Strengthen primary health care
47. Take actions towards ensuring a primary health care approach as a resilient
foundation to achieve universal health coverage;
48. Strengthen and orient health systems and social care policies and
capacities to achieve universal health care and support the essential needs of people
living with or at risk of noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions,
across the life course, including through measures such as the following, in line with
national contexts: (a) expanding primary health and community-based services to
improve health promotion, prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment, referral
pathways and follow-up, for hypertension, diabetes, cancers, chronic respiratory
diseases, chronic kidney disease and other noncommunicable diseases, as well as
anxiety, depression, oral diseases and sickle cell disease; (b) integrating, as
appropriate, prevention, screening, diagnosis, rehabilitation and long-term care into
existing programmes for communicable diseases, maternal and child health, and
sexual and reproductive health programmes; (c) integrating, as appropriate, responses
to noncommunicable diseases and communicable diseases, such as HIV/AIDS and
tuberculosis, especially in countries with the highest prevalence rates, taking into
account their linkages; (d) shifting, as appropriate, mental health care and resources
from specialized institutions to general health care services delivered in community-
based settings; and (e) ensuring access to care for people in humanitarian settings and
ensuring continuity of care for people during emergencies and prolonged movement;
49. Prevent and treat cardiovascular diseases by scaling up: (a) early
screening, monitoring and diagnosis, affordable and effective treatment, and regular
follow-up for people at risk of cardiovascular disease or living with high blood
pressure; (b) access to appropriate treatment and therapy for those at high risk of a
heart attack or stroke; and (c) innovation in cardiovascular care technologies; and by
addressing diagnostic gaps of cardiovascular conditions in women;
50. Improve care and access to care for people living with diabetes by
strengthening measures such as early diagnosis, affordable and effective treatment
and regular follow-up for people at risk or living with diabetes to reduce the likelihood
of cardiovascular, renal and other complications;
51. Prevent and control cancers by promoting early access to affordable
diagnostics, including cancer staging, screening, treatment and care, as well as
vaccines that lower the risk of cancer, as part of a comprehensive approach to
prevention and control, taking into account national contexts and regional
cooperation;
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
10/14
52. Eliminate cervical cancer by scaling up, where appropriate: (a) human
papillomavirus vaccination coverage for girls and boys; (b) access to effective,
feasible and appropriate screening for cervical cancer, especially for those at higher
risk, such as women living with HIV; and (c) access to early, quality treatment for all
women with cervical cancer; and integrate breast and cervical cancer prevention in
national programmes;
53. Improve childhood cancer survival through scaling up interventions in
order to achieve a survival rate of at least 60 per cent globally by 2030, as proposed
by the Global Initiative for Childhood Cancer;
54. Prevent liver cancer and other liver diseases and reduce mortality through
scaling up hepatitis B and C prevention, diagnosis and treatment, hepatitis B
vaccination, monitoring to detect liver cancer early and improve survival, as well as
strengthening screening and management for non‑alcoholic fatty liver disease;
55. Promote national policies for an integrated approach to lung health
encompassing both noncommunicable and communicable diseases within primary
health care and scale up prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of asthma and
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by improving measures such as access to
effective treatment, strengthening diagnostic services and establishing structured
programmes and services for the long-term management of chronic respiratory
diseases;
56. Scale up services to address the excessively high rates of oral health
conditions through health promotion, prevention, early detection and treatment,
applying multisectoral strategies and integrating oral health services into primary
health care and universal health coverage;
57. Scale up, particularly at the primary health care level and within general
health care services, the accessibility, availability and provision of psychosocial and
psychological support, and pharmacological treatment for depression, anxiety and
psychosis, as well as for other related conditions, including childhood and youth
mental health conditions, and self-harm, harmful use of alcohol, other substance
abuse, epilepsy, dementia, autism spectrum disorder and attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder, while addressing related stigma, including through inclusive
and accessible quality public education and the involvement of people with lived
experience;
58. Develop, strengthen and implement, where possible, palliative care
policies to support the comprehensive strengthening of health systems to integrate
evidence-based, cost-effective, equitable and accessible palliative care services in the
continuum of care, across all levels, with an emphasis on primary care, community
and home-based care and universal coverage schemes;
59. Promote measures to increase the number, capacity, retention and
competencies, including cultural competency, of trained health care workers, to
implement integrated primary health care for health promotion, prevention, screening,
diagnosis, treatment, rehabilitation and palliative care for people living with or at risk
of noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions, including persons with
disabilities, and to strengthen knowledge and skills related to the implementation of
laws, policies, services and practices in the area of mental health;
60. Promote equitable, sustainable and affordable access to quality-assured
vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics, medicines and other health products for
noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions while supporting and
creating systems to uphold their quality and safety, including through: (a) applying
pricing policies, promoting increased price transparency and strengthening financial
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
11/14
25-20712
protection mechanisms, such as health benefit packages, which reduce out-of-pocket
expenditure; (b) strengthening procurement, including through pooled procurement,
and diversified, resilient supply chains; and (c) strengthening regulatory systems;
61. Leverage technologies, research and innovation for noncommunicable
disease prevention and control and improving mental health, including through
artificial intelligence and digital13 and assistive products and technologies, including
medical imaging, telemedicine and mobile health services, that are evidence-based,
cost-effective and affordable, and based on the local context to increase access,
particularly for those living in remote areas, to quality systems and services and to
empower people, while recognizing that the risks that these technologies can pose
should be addressed and that digital health interventions can contribute to, but are not
a substitute for, functioning health systems;
62. Promote the transfer of technology, on mutually agreed terms, and know-
how and encourage research, innovation and commitments to voluntary licensing,
where possible, in agreements where public funding has been invested in the research
and development, particularly for the prevention and treatment of noncommunicable
diseases and mental health conditions, to strengthen local and regional capacities for
the manufacturing, regulation and procurement of needed tools for equitable and
effective access to vaccines, therapeutics, diagnostics and essential supplies, as well
as for clinical trials, and to increase global supply through facilitating transfer of
technology within the framework of relevant multilateral agreements;
63. Encourage the promotion of increased access to affordable, safe, effective
and quality medicines, including generics, vaccines, diagnostics and health
technologies, reaffirming the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement) as amended, and also
reaffirming the 2001 World Trade Organization Doha Declaration on the TRIPS
Agreement and Public Health, which recognizes that intellectual property rights
should be interpreted and implemented in a manner supportive of the right of Member
States to protect public health and, in particular, to promote access to medicines for
all, and noting the need for appropriate incentives in the development of new health
products;
Target: at least 80 per cent of primary health care facilities in all countries have
availability of World Health Organization-recommended essential medicines and
basic technologies for noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions, at
affordable prices, by 2030.
Mobilize adequate and sustainable financing
64. Mobilize and allocate adequate, predictable and sustained resources for
national responses to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases and to promote
mental health and well-being, through domestic, bilateral and multilateral channels,
including international cooperation and official development assistance, and continue
exploring voluntary innovative financing mechanisms and partnerships, including
with the private sector, to advance action at all levels;
65. Strengthen coordination among existing global health financing
frameworks to avoid duplication and fragmentation so as to better meet the needs of
all countries, especially of developing countries;
_______________
13 Examples include: (a) digitalized health systems; (b) electronic patient records, appointment
reminders, telemedicine, health information systems and digital payments; and (c) access to
application chatbots and mobile health services to track health, support medicine adherence and
enable behavioural change.
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
12/14
66. Scale up, as appropriate and according to national contexts, financial
resources dedicated to mental health, and acknowledge the World Health
Organization’s support to Member States in their efforts to address mental health and
well-being and neurodevelopmental conditions, such as autism spectrum disorder;
67. Use external support from development partners, where available, for
advancing national efforts to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases,
including for catalysing improvements in service capacities, access and outcomes,
and, as appropriate, fiscal, regulatory and legislative policy change, and support the
development of global and regional public health goods;
68. Take measures to reduce out-of-pocket expenditure and the risk of
impoverishment for people and households affected by noncommunicable diseases
and mental health conditions by implementing financial protection policies to cover
or limit the cost of essential services, diagnostics, assistive products, psychosocial
support and medicines;
Target: at least 60 per cent of countries have financial protection policies or measures
in place that cover or limit the cost of essential services, diagnostics, medicines and
other health products for noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions by
2030.
Strengthen governance
69. Promote, develop and implement noncommunicable diseases and mental
health multisectoral national plans, and subnational plans, as appropriate to national
circumstances and based on a whole-of-government, health-in-all policies and whole-
of-society approach, that: (a) are focused on a set of evidence-based, cost-effective
and affordable interventions that are based on the local context; (b) identify the roles
and responsibilities of government ministries and agencies; (c) are costed and
budgeted and linked to broader health, development and emergency plans; (d) respect
human rights and engage in a culturally competent way with communities and people
living with noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions; (e) are
ambitious, operational and realistic and have measurable targets; and (f) encourage
international support, including from development partners, to complement these
efforts;
70. Integrate noncommunicable disease prevention and control, and the
provision of mental health and psychosocial support, into emergency and pandemic
prevention, preparedness and response, and humanitarian response frameworks to
contribute to resilient and responsive health systems capable of effective emergency
preparedness and response;
71. Strengthen the design and implementation of policies, including for
resilient health systems and health services and infrastructure to treat people living
with noncommunicable diseases and prevent and control their risk factors in
humanitarian emergencies, including before, during and after natural disasters, with
a particular focus on countries most vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate
change, natural disasters and extreme weather events;
72. Address the impact of misinformation and disinformation around the
prevention and treatment of noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions
and their risk factors, including by increasing health literacy and regulating the digital
environment in a manner consistent with national and international law, to protect,
especially, children and young people;
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
A/RES/80/117
13/14
25-20712
Target: at least 80 per cent of countries have an operational, multisectoral, integrated
policy, strategy or action plan on noncommunicable diseases and mental health and
well-being by 2030.
Support research, strengthen data and public health surveillance, to advance
evidence, monitor progress and hold ourselves accountable
73. Maintain or, where appropriate, improve a sustainable infrastructure for
systematic, integrated surveillance on noncommunicable diseases, mental health
conditions and their risk factors, including death registration, population-based
surveys and facility-based information systems, with interoperability across digital
health platforms, while respecting the right to privacy and promoting data protection;
74. Develop and support national and regional capacity for data collection,
disaggregated data analysis, health economic analysis, health technology assessment
and implementation research related to noncommunicable diseases and mental health
service development and evaluation, as well as regional data-sharing and
collaborative surveillance systems, to enhance understanding of regional trends in
noncommunicable diseases, mental health conditions and their risk factors, while
respecting the right to privacy and promoting data protection;
75. Share information on experiences, including successes and challenges
related to the implementation of national policies and programmes to prevent and
control noncommunicable diseases and promote mental health and well-being, and
incorporate reporting on noncommunicable diseases and mental health into
Sustainable Development Goals-related review processes such as the voluntary
national reviews, including timely reporting on global targets, and establish or
strengthen transparent national accountability mechanisms for the prevention and
control of noncommunicable diseases, taking into account government efforts in
developing, implementing and monitoring national multisectoral responses for
addressing
noncommunicable
diseases
and
existing
global
accountability
mechanisms, as appropriate;
Target: at least 80 per cent of countries have an operational noncommunicable
diseases and mental health surveillance and monitoring system, in line with national
circumstances, by 2030.
Follow up
In order to ensure adequate follow-up, we:
76. Recognize the key role of the World Health Organization as the directing
and coordinating authority on international health, in accordance with its
Constitution, to continue to support Member States through its normative and
standard-setting work, the provision of technical cooperation, assistance and policy
advice and the promotion of multisectoral and multi-stakeholder partnerships and
dialogues;
77. Call upon United Nations agencies and encourage multilateral
development banks and other regional and intergovernmental organizations, within
their respective mandates, to scale up and mobilize support in a coordinated approach
to Member States in their efforts to prevent and control noncommunicable diseases
and promote mental health and well-being, and the implementation of the present
political declaration;
78. Further call upon United Nations agencies, regional and intergovernmental
organizations, within their respective mandates, to support Member States through
catalytic development assistance, including through the United Nations Inter-Agency
A/RES/80/117
Political declaration of the fourth high-level meeting of the
General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable
diseases and the promotion of mental health and well-being
25-20712
14/14
Task Force on the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases and the
Health4Life Fund;
79. Encourage global health initiatives, such as the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, within their
respective mandates, to strengthen efforts towards the inclusion of interventions for
noncommunicable diseases and mental health conditions into their work programme;
80. Call upon the private sector to strengthen its commitment and contribution
to the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases and the promotion of
mental health and well-being through the implementation of the present political
declaration and the outcomes of the previous high-level meetings of the General
Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases held in 2011,
2014 and 2018, taking into account the need to prevent conflicts of interest;
81. Request the Secretary-General, in consultation with Member States and in
collaboration with the World Health Organization and relevant funds, programmes
and specialized agencies of the United Nations system, to submit to the General
Assembly by the end of 2030 a progress report on the implementation of the present
political declaration on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases and
the promotion of mental health and well-being, which will serve to inform the next
high-level meeting, to be convened in 2031.
▶ Cite this page
UN Project. “A/RES/80/117.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/votes/resolution/A-RES-80-117/. Accessed .