©NCD Alliance
What drives NCDs?
Most NCDs are linked to the social and physical environment around us. Five main risk factors—alcohol, tobacco, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity and air pollution—significantly increase a person's chance of developing an NCD.
Comprehensive prevention strategies are an effective and cost-effective way to reduce the NCD burden. Interventions should focus on creating environments that support health-promoting behaviours and limit exposure to risk factors.
Exposure to NCD risk factors is conditioned by structural, socioeconomic and environmental determinants limiting people's ability to make healthy choices. NCD risk factors are modifiable when populations are provided with the right support.