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Urban Health Leaders Renew Commitment to Accelerate Life-Saving Action in Cities

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Published April 2nd, 2026
Detected April 3rd, 2026
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Summary

The World Health Organization, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Vital Strategies, and the Municipal Health Secretariat of Rio de Janeiro co-hosted the 2026 Partnership for Healthy Cities Summit in Rio de Janeiro, bringing together health officials from 55 cities. Baltimore, USA announced it will join the Partnership to focus on overdose prevention. Cities showcased initiatives including tobacco control, healthy school food environments, and heat health action protocols.

What changed

The 2026 Partnership for Healthy Cities Summit concluded in Rio de Janeiro with 55 cities reaffirming commitments to address noncommunicable diseases and injuries, which account for over 80% of deaths worldwide. Baltimore announced its joining the Partnership with a focus on overdose prevention, expanding the network's growing priority now being addressed by 11 cities. Participants toured Rio's public health initiatives including comprehensive tobacco control, healthy school food environments, and a pioneering heat health action protocol.

This document announces voluntary commitments without regulatory requirements or compliance deadlines. There are no penalties or mandatory actions for regulated entities. Cities implementing initiatives like Athens expanding naloxone access, Bengaluru strengthening smoke-free laws, and Mexico City redesigning streets for cycling are doing so under voluntary partnership frameworks rather than binding regulations. No regulatory or legal obligations are imposed on any parties.

Source document (simplified)

Courtesy of Bloomberg Philanthropies
Gabriela Mistral public school, an institution providing healthy nutrition solutions in Urca neighborhood, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on 31 March 2026 © Credits

Urban health leaders renew commitment to accelerate life-saving action in cities

2 April 2026 Departmental update Geneva / Rio de Janeiro Reading time:
As noncommunicable diseases and injuries continue to account for more than 80% of deaths worldwide, global urban health experts concluded the 2026 Partnership for Healthy Cities Summit in Rio de Janeiro this week with a renewed commitment to accelerate life-saving action in cities.

Co-hosted by the World Health Organization, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Vital Strategies and the Municipal Health Secretariat of Rio de Janeiro, the Summit brought together health officials, urban planners and global experts from 55 cities. Participants shared proven, scalable solutions that are already improving health outcomes.

With more than half of the world’s population now living in urban areas, city leaders are uniquely positioned to act, driving bold, evidence-based policies that reduce health risks and save lives. Noncommunicable diseases including heart disease, cancer, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes, remain the leading causes of death globally, while injuries, including those from road traffic crashes, continue to claim millions of lives each year.

During the Summit, it was announced that Baltimore in the United States of America will join the Partnership, they will be working in overdose prevention, bringing new momentum to the network’s growing focus on an emerging priority now being addressed by 11 cities worldwide.

Throughout the Summit, participants engaged directly with Rio de Janeiro’s public health initiatives, visiting schools and health clinics — demonstrating how cities can translate global commitments into real-world impact.

Key initiatives showcased included:

  • comprehensive tobacco control: Free cessation services integrated across the municipal health system, reinforcing Brazil’s global leadership in reducing tobacco use;
  • healthy school food environments: A citywide programme promoting fresh, minimally-processed foods while eliminating ultra-processed products from public schools and&nb
  • Heat health action protocol: A pioneering, data-driven system that anticipates extreme heat risks and triggers early interventions, from cooling centres to public alerts, offering a model for climate-health resilience worldwide.
    Building on momentum from previous Summits hosted in London, Cape Town and Paris, cities across the network continue to implement transformative policies:

  • Athens, Greece expanded access to naloxone to prevent opioid overdose deaths;

  • Bengaluru, India strengthened smoke-free laws and banned public hookah use;

  • Dublin, Ireland used data to expand safer walking and cycling infrastructure;

  • Mexico City, Mexico redesigned streets, increasing safe cycling; and

  • Montevideo, Uruguay set nutrition standards across public institutions.
    Together, these efforts reinforce a clear global lesson: when cities act decisively, health outcomes improve rapidly — and at scale.

Related

WHO's work on urban health Cities and urban health Fact sheets

Urban health 19 March 2025

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
WHO
Published
April 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Healthcare providers Public health authorities
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Healthcare Urban Planning Noncommunicable Diseases

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