1 s2.0 S0140673612621357 Main
1 s2.0 S0140673612621357 Main
1 s2.0 S0140673612621357 Main
success of the GBD, then and now, is that it provides a level playing eld to assess independently (and dispassionately) the health priorities that face countries. In the meantime, everyone concerned with health health workers and policy makers, those working in technical agencies (across the UN system), development partners, civil society, and the research community should use these latest ndings to sharpen understanding of trends in disease, injury, and risk. We should use them to spark global, regional, and national debates about their meaning for policy and practice. We should use them to hold one another accountable for progress towards internationally agreed development goals and to plan for the post-2015 era of sustainable development,
where the scope of health as an indispensable part of human development will be broadened still further. And, nally, we should use them as a platform to advocate ever more vigorously for the growing consensus that universal health coverage could be the third great global health transition.1 GBD 2010 is an extraordinary collaboration. Our collective responsibility is to turn it into an extraordinary opportunity. Richard Horton
The Lancet, London NW1 7BY, UK
1 Rodin J, de Ferranti D. Universal health coverage: the third global health transition. Lancet 2012; 380: 86162.
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See Comment pages 2053, 2055, 2058, 2060, 2062, and 2063 See Special Report page 2067 See Articles pages 2071, 2095, 2129, 2144, 2163, 2197, and 2224
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