Emerging and Cross-Cutting Global Health Challenges
Emerging and cross-cutting global health challenges are the problems that span national borders, sectors, and disease categories and that increasingly define the twenty-first-century global health agenda. Rather than single diseases, they are systemic pressures - the rising burden of non-communicable diseases, climate change, antimicrobial resistance, and the governance arrangements needed to coordinate a collective response - whose causes and consequences cannot be addressed by any one country or program alone.
Definition
Cross-cutting global health challenges are health problems whose determinants and solutions extend across borders, sectors, and disease silos, requiring coordinated international and multisectoral action rather than disease-specific or single-country interventions.
Scope
This area orients readers to four interlinked topics treated in detail beneath it: non-communicable diseases in global context, climate change and health, antimicrobial resistance, and global health governance and cooperation. It frames why these issues are grouped as cross-cutting - they share transnational drivers, demand multisectoral action, and reshape priorities once dominated by infectious-disease control. It is a reference overview, not clinical guidance.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- Why are non-communicable diseases, climate change, antimicrobial resistance, and governance treated as cross-cutting rather than disease-specific problems?
- What transnational drivers link these challenges to one another?
- How is the global burden of disease shifting from infectious to chronic and environmental causes?
- What forms of international cooperation are required to address problems no single country can solve alone?
Key concepts
- Epidemiologic transition
- Global burden of disease
- Planetary health
- Multisectoral action
- Transnational health determinants
- Health convergence
Clinical relevance
Understanding these cross-cutting challenges helps health professionals and students place individual diseases within the wider systems - demographic, environmental, microbial, and political - that shape population health. The area describes how global health priorities are framed and is not a basis for individual diagnostic or treatment decisions.
Epidemiology
Global health metrics document a long-running shift in the leading causes of death and disability toward non-communicable diseases, alongside persistent infectious threats and new environmental risks; comprehensive estimates such as the Global Burden of Disease analyses quantify this transition across 195 countries and territories.
History
The framing of global health around shared, border-crossing challenges crystallised in the late 2000s and 2010s, as efforts to define global health as a field (Koplan and colleagues, 2009) coincided with agenda-setting analyses such as Global Health 2035 (Jamison and colleagues, 2013) that argued for a converging world in which chronic disease, environment, and cooperation became central concerns.
Key figures
- Jeffrey Koplan
- Dean Jamison
- Lawrence Summers
Related topics
Seminal works
- koplan-2009
- jamison-2013
Frequently asked questions
- What makes a health problem 'cross-cutting'?
- Its causes and solutions span borders, sectors, and disease categories, so it cannot be addressed by one country or one disease program acting alone - climate change and antimicrobial resistance are clear examples.
- Why group non-communicable diseases with climate and governance?
- All four reflect a shift in the global health agenda toward systemic, transnational pressures rather than the single-pathogen focus that historically dominated international health.