The main causes of chronic noncommunicable diseases reside
in non-health sectors; Compare the commercial practices of tobacco, alcohol,
beverages / food industries and their marketing and advertising budgets vs. the
ridiculous budgets on health issues and the ephemeral results of developing
countries in fighting epidemics such as Obesity, Diabetes Mellitus, Cancer ,
Hypertension, etc. We live in an extremely unequal world, the difference in
life expectancy between the richest and the poorest countries already exceeds
40 years, according to OECD.
Since the beginning of this century, WHO has made some
contributions aimed at the population in prevention, through the adoption of
international guidelines and global strategies to reduce the harmful use of
tobacco, alcohol, improve diet-nutrition and physical activity. Prevention is
precisely the key to this global proposal; But on a personal, family and
community level, the family doctor is the cornerstone to carry out this
difficult task.
The family doctor attends without distinction to the
individual in a family context and to the family in a community context. This
health professional must be clinically competent to provide most of the care
required by the individual, his family and the community afterwards. In short,
the family doctor is personally responsible for providing comprehensive and
continuous care to his patients and the surrounding environment.
In view of the growing global health problems, the need for
a higher focus on primary care, on developing and implementing health
prevention and promotion actions that generates tangible results and are
accessible to the entire population, emphasizing the family as the central
nucleus of society and addressing each of its members with integrity, empathy
and human warmth.
Together, a better world is possible!