The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) agenda crafted in 2001 targeting prominent challenges the world facing. These are eight international development goals to be achieved by 2015 addressing poverty, hunger, maternal and child mortality, communicable disease, education, gender inequality, environmental damage and the global partnership. This framework has laid ground by setting quantitative and time-bound targets despite variability among countries capability and starting baselines.
Though irregular, the MDGs announcement have raised governments' commitment and public awareness that helped mobilize action in support of poverty eradication efforts across the world. However, since the ongoing interventions are variable and slow, some of the targets may remain unreachable. Most efforts worldwide have focused on maternal and child health and communicable diseases with limited attention to other targets. As a result, as the deadline for the MDGs comes closer, some countries are on track of achieving some of the targets, but, some of the world's low income countries are being left behind in efforts to meet the targets.
Several factors contributed for these irregularities. The MDGs were developed somehow in a closed-door with little or no consultation among developing countries, civil society and other stakeholders which resulted in poor ownership by civil society and national governments. Furthermore, they focus on sub-sections of certain social sectors and selective human needs. In some, the targets are not ambitious enough, in others, they are unfeasible. The other failure has been a lack of accountability for meeting goals in an equitable, transparent and participatory manner that promotes sustained institutional change.
The UN decided on the need of setting a more ambitious development agenda to accede to the MDGs. The goals and targets beyond 2015 must consider lessons from the current set of MDGs. The first step is to have broad consultations on the future goals by creating fora for local, national, and regional debate involving key stakeholders, including governments, civil societies, private sector and development agencies.
Accordingly, the post-2015 agenda is now under discussion. The new targets, whatever the nomenclature is, should reflect today's political situation, health and environmental challenges, and an all-inclusive, inter-sectoral and accountable approach should be adopted. Nations must agree on a new set of goals and adapt at the national level to reflect each country's specific capacities, constraints and challenges. In addition to customizing the targets, countries should be assessed on their progress and the efforts they are making to expand opportunities to live in freedom and dignity for all, without discrimination.
Now sdgs apply to both developinh and developed.
Sdg 3 for example has now focused on preventive and wellness aspect of health compared to simply disease control aspect of mdg.
Also in the same direction is the inclusion of non communicable diseases while mdg only had communicable diseases
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