EU-project SUNI-SEA: Fight against 'silent killers' in Southeast Asia
High blood pressure and diabetes have also developed into widespread diseases in Southeast Asia. A team from the University of Passau is participating in the EU project SUNI-SEA, which aims to massively increase effective prevention.
Chronic diseases such as diabetes and cardio-vascular diseases have long been considered a problem in Western countries. Now, these non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are also on the rise in low- and middle-income countries. In South-East Asian countries, up to 75 per cent of deaths are caused by NCDs.
The diseases, dubbed 'silent killers', are so insidious because they damage the body in a creeping process: patients do not feel pain until severe damage has occurred. Nevertheless, they can be well influenced by early diagnosis and lifestyle changes.
This is what the project 'SUNI-SEA - Scaling Up NCD Interventions', led by HelpAge International UK and funded under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 programme, aims to achieve: It examines existing prevention programmes in Indonesia, Myanmar and Vietnam and looks at how to strengthen and expand particularly effective measures.
‘We want to considerably reduce the burden of non-communicable diseases in these countries’, sayd Michael Grimm, Professor of Development Economics at the University of Passau. Together with his team, he contributes expertise in the field of data analysis: The researchers from Passau provide tools to measure the impact of existing measures. On this basis, they design proposals to significantly increase their effects.
90-90-90 target in prevention
‘The target of the project is that 90 per cent of the population should be aware of the risk factors, and 90 per cent of those need to get a proper diagnosis, and 90 per cent of those a proper treatment’, sayd Professor Grimm. Currently, the results of existing prevention programmes in the countries to be studied fall far short of these numbers as they reach only one-third of those at risk for hypertension and diabetes.
There are significant gender differences when it comes to diabetes and hypertension: obesity and nutrition have a higher impact on women’s health, whereas smoking and alcohol use are more important in men’s health. In addition, health-seeking behaviours differ, with men ignoring health complaints for a long time before seeking advice, and women receiving an inadequate care for their complaints.
Partners in Europe and South-East Asia
The project is coordinated by HelpAge International UK, a non-governmental organisation. Its European partners in the project are the University of Passau, the University of Groeningen (Netherlands) and the University of Travna (Slovakia) participate in the project. In South-East-Asia, the Universitas Sebelas Maret (Indonesia), the University of Public Health (Myanmar), the Thai Nguyen University for Medicine & Pharmacy and the Health Strategy and Policy Institute (both Vietnam) are partners.
In Indonesia, the National Social Health Insurance and the Ministry of Health are assoicated partners.
Principal Investigator(s) at the University | Prof. Dr. Michael Grimm (Lehrstuhl für Development Economics) |
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Project period | 01.01.2019 - 31.12.2022 |
Website | https://www.suni-sea.org |
Source of funding | Europäische Union (EU) > EU - 8. Forschungsrahmenprogramm (Horizon 2020) |
Funding notice | This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 825026. |