Hiroshi Watanabe
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Sustainable development

    Overview

    Sustainable development is a broad term to describe policies, projects and investments that provide benefits today without sacrificing environmental, social and personal health in the future. These policies are often described as green because they focus on limiting the impact of development on the environment. However, the benefits of sustainable development are also felt across a wide cross section of human health and well-being, including reductions in pollution- and environment-related disease, improved health outcomes and decreased stress.

    As the threats of climate change become increasingly important, win-win strategies for mitigation, health improvement and cost savings offer a range of advantages for various stakeholders. For example, greener health care operations can generate patient and worker health benefits while also saving energy, mitigating climate risks and creating long-term cost savings. The World Health Organization is committed to pursuing sustainable development in all its work to help protect the people of tomorrow from the health growing health risks of today.
    Impact

    Many sustainable development strategies can offer significant wins for health, climate and the environment, and the benefits can be seen almost immediately. For example, many health and development goals can be achieved simultaneously by tackling air pollution, which is responsible for an estimated 7 million premature deaths annually. Polluting emissions include powerful short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs)—particularly black carbon, ozone and methane—which are very harmful to health but have only brief atmospheric lifetimes.

    Transport policies and investments that favour clean public transport, along with walking and cycling, can have a dramatic impact on air quality. This can reduce multiple health risks at the same time, including stroke, heart attack, lung disease and some cancers. They can also reduce the estimated 1.25 million deaths annually from traffic injury, while also improving access to health services, particularly in densely populated areas.

    Sustainable development housing policies can further reduce emissions through considerations such as building siting and land use, choices of construction materials, design features and ventilation and energy.

    WHO response

    WHO’s work is guided by the Sustainable Development Goals, particularly Goal 3: “Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.” The Goals inform projects and policies across the Organization, including guidelines on housing, urban development, transportation systems and health care delivery.

    For example, the WHO Housing and health guidelines, first published in 2018, highlight the increasing impact of housing conditions on human health in light of urban growth, climate and demographic changes. The guidelines provide Member States, partners and the public with evidence-based recommendations relevant to inadequate living space (crowding), low and high indoor temperatures, injury hazards in the home, and accessibility of housing for people with functional impairments.

    The Urban Health Initiative (UHI) also focuses on ways for cities to enable good health by catalysing effective action on urban air pollution and short-lived climate pollutants (SLCPs)—saving lives by linking health, environment and sustainable development. WHO also collaborates with the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) on the Breathe Life campaign, which aims to cut air pollution and reduce the 7 million premature deaths annually that it causes.

    Technical information

    Initiative

    Urban Health Initiative

    Infographics

    Publications

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    2024 progress report on the Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All

    Past the crucial midpoint to the SDGs, the 2024 SDG3 GAP progress report, ‘Aligning for country impact’, focuses on alignment as the overarching...

    WHO country stories: delivering for all

    The stories collected here are anchored in the WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work (GPW 13) results framework, which measures  the progress...

    2023 progress report on the Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All

    This fourth annual progress report for the Global Action Plan for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All (SDG3 GAP) discusses what has worked and what has...

    Sustain Accelerate Innovate - South-East Asia: flagship priority programmes driving impact in countries for the health of billions

    Impact at country level lies at the heart of eight Flagship Priority Programmes that were identified in consultation with the Member States based on their...

    Documents

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    As part of the monitoring of the SDG3 GAP, national governments and responsible authorities were asked to respond to questions concerning their health...

    Lessons learned from joint financing of health systems strengthening in low- and middle-income countries

    Gavi, Global Fund, Global Financing Facility, World Bank, with the World Health Organization now have considerable experience in joint financing of support...

    Analyzing data collected from national governments and relevant authorities through the questionnaire of the SDG3 GAP monitoring framework

    In line with the SDG3 GAP monitoring framework, national governments and relevant authorities were asked to provide responses to a short questionnaire...

    Induction slide deck for country-facing teams of the SDG3 GAP agencies

    This document addresses the key aspects of the SDG3 Global Action Plan and its relevance for work at country level. It is intended as a tool for country...