from Epidemiological Bulletin,
Vol. 24 No. 2, June 2003
Report of the Thirty-fourth Session on Health Statistics of the United Nations
Statistical Commission, March 2003
The Thirty-fourth Session of the United Nations Statistical Commission
took place on 4-7 March 2003 in New York, NY, U.S.A. The session was attended
by twenty-four Member States of the Commission. Observers for other Member States
of the United Nations system and for intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations also attended. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Pan
American Health Organization/Regional Office for the World Health Organization
(PAHO/WHO) were represented.
The Commission reviewed the ongoing work of groups of countries
and international organizations in various fields of demographic, social, economic,
and environmental statistics and on certain cross-cutting issues in statistics.(1)
As presented succinctly below, issues addressed by the Commission included the
overall coordination between international organizations and national statistical
offices in the production and dissemination of health statistics; international
support to build capacity in developing countries to respond to the needs of
monitoring activities related to Millenium Development Goal 8 (Develop
a global partnership for development); and the importance of statistical
capacity-building as part of development programs.
WHO presented a paper that summarized its recent activities in
relation to health statistics. The paper included a discussion on WHOs
scientific peer review; development and dissemination of health statistics;
World Health Survey; and strengthening country capacity. The Commission welcomed
the report and, among other things:
a) Expressed support for the work of WHO on the WHO Family of International
Classifications, and requested guidelines on the preparation of national health
accounts.
b) Proposed that guidelines be prepared on implementing the automated coding
systems for recording cause of death;
c) Requested WHO, in collaboration with the United Nations Statistics Division
and other relevant bodies of the United Nations system, to explore alternative
methods of estimating the prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus/acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS).
d) Requested that a group of Friends of the Chair be created to examine coordination
among international organizations and between international organizations and
national statistical offices in the production and dissemination of health statistics,
recommend actions to be taken for improvement, and report back to the Commission.
e) Further requested that the sub-item entitled Health statistics
remain in the agenda of forthcoming sessions of the Commission. (1)
The Commission also reviewed the report of the Secretary-General
on the subject of Social Statistics and recommended actions to be taken. Inter-alia,
the Commission said that, with respect to the international collection of disability
statistics, it:
a) Emphasized the need to ensure the collection of internationally comparable
disability statistics; and,
b) Recommended the compilation of gender-relevant statistics.(1)
The Commission also discussed the report on the status of the
millennium development goal country reporting. The Commission agreed that further
harmonization and prioritization in the field of development indicators were
needed, in particular with regard to the indicators for the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs). The MDGs came into being as a result of the Millennium Declaration
that was adopted by 147 heads of State and Government and 189 nations in September
2000. The objective of the Declaration is to promote a comprehensive approach
and a coordinated strategy, tackling many problems simultaneously across a broad
front. To help track progress, the development experts of the United Nations
agencies, funds, and programs, as well as the International Monetary Fund, the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the World Bank
derived from the Millennium Declaration a framework of measurable goals and
targets for combating poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy, environmental degradation,
and discrimination against women.(2)
In its thirty-fourth Session, members of the Commission emphasized
that:
a) Any international list of recommended indicators should be adapted in each
country to the economic and social circumstances and priorities of that country,
and take into account each countrys statistical capacities and need for
a phased, practical program of statistics development; and
b) National statistical services should have a leading role in developing national
country reports.(1)
The Commission considered an agenda item entitled Statistical
Capacity-building. The corresponding report reviewed cooperative activities
by the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD) which seek to build the statistical
capacity of countries in the respective regions. UNSD continues to pay particular
attention to building capability by transferring technical expertise between
countries and promoting common technical standards and methodology.(3)
The Commission emphasized the importance of statistical capacity-building
and stressed that statistical capacity-building efforts needed to be an integral
part of development programs.
These and other topics that relate to national statistics, their
comparability, and the promotion of improved statistical methods will be included
in the agenda of the Commissions thirty-fifth session in March 2004.
References
(1) Organization of the United Nations. Statistical Commission. Report of the
Thirty-Fourth Session. New York, NY, USA: UN; March 2003. (E/CN.3/2003/34)
(2) Organization of the United Nations. Statistical Commission. Report of the
Thirty-Fourth Session. Harmonization of indicators and reporting on progress
towards the millenium development goals. NY, USA: UN; March 2003. (E/CN.3/2003/21)
(3) Organization of the United Nations. Economic and Social Council. Report
of the Thirty-fourth Session of the United nations Statistical Commission. Statistical
capacity-building. New York, NY, USA: UN; March 2003. (E/CN.3/2003/23)
Source: PAHOs Area of Health Information and Information
Systems (AIS).
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Epidemiological Bulletin, Vol. 24 No. 2, June
2003