The Rio opportunity – how the G20 can drive progress on healthy digital transformations

News & insights
October 24, 2024
Louise Holly
By -

As the G20 Health Ministers meet next week, our new policy brief explores what action they can take to build health systems and digital environments that support better health and well-being for young people. The answer: a multisectoral public health approach which actively involves young people.

Over three-quarters of the world’s young people aged 0 to 24 years live in G20 countries. Investing in young people’s health is necessary to promote their lifelong health and accelerate progress towards universal health coverage. It is also critical for a nation’s overall socioeconomic development.

Digital transformations present a major opportunity to realize the right to health for everyone and strengthen health systems to become more responsive to current and future health priorities. But young digital technology users are also being exposed to a range of risks which can undermine their physical and mental health, development and well-being.

Governments are facing the dual challenge of ensuring that all people can benefit from the positive and health promoting aspects of digital transformations while protecting them from harms associated with technology use.

A coordinated approach to the digital determinants of health

A coordinated approach to the digital determinants of health

Many of the health-related impacts of digital transformations—known collectively as the digital determinants of health—are taking place outside of the formal health sector and cannot be effectively addressed without multisectoral collaboration and action. The current disconnect between health governance and digital governance must be bridged.

Recent G20 presidencies have identified health, digitalization and investing in youth as priorities, however the initiatives introduced to take these agendas forward have been conducted in parallel. This siloed approach misses opportunities for multisectoral action to address the digital determinants of young people’s health and well-being. We urge G20 leaders, when they convene this year in Brazil and next year in South Africa, to establish an initiative to build digital environments that support equitable health outcomes for all young people.

Introducing a coordinated approach would give a strong mandate to health actors to enact a public health response to the opportunities and challenges of the broader digital transformation process alongside efforts to expand the benefits of digital health solutions.

Multisectoral dialogue and action is urgently required to build digital first health systems and digital environments that effectively support young people’s health and well-being. The Rio Summit presents an opportunity for G20 Leaders to connect the dots and take a holistic approach to digital health transformations.

Giving young people a say in their digital future

Giving young people a say in their digital future

Despite critical inequities in their digital skills and access, young people are keen adopters of digital technologies and are already using them to support their health and well-being. Yet initiatives to digitally transform health systems often fail to consider young people as co-creators and users.

Across the globe, adolescents and young adults have voiced concerns about being sidelined in policymaking processes related to both health and digital transformations. Leading to distrust in data practices and the application of digital health technologies.

By investing in young people’s digital health futures and making both health and digital governance more participatory and inclusive, innovations in health and other sectors can contribute to more equitable health outcomes and enable the benefits of digital transformation to be distributed more fairly.

A clear statement from the G20 on the importance of meaningfully engaging young people in the co-creation of digital first health systems and in strengthening digital health governance would send a powerful message to policymakers and tech companies to invest in a new generation of digital health citizens.

An opportunity to promote young people’s health and well-being

An opportunity to promote young people’s health and well-being

As Brazil’s presidency culminates and South Africa prepares to take the baton, the G20 has a unique opportunity to promote young people’s health and well-being by prioritizing digital determinants of health and greater involvement of young people in digital health governance.

We urge G20 leaders, when they convene this year in Brazil and next year in South Africa, to establish an initiative to build digital environments that support equitable health outcomes for all young people.

Download our policy brief
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References

Download our policy brief Healthy digital transformations: A call to G20 leaders to build health systems and digital environments that support better health and well-being for young people

Louise Holly has more than 20 years’ experience of global policy analysis, research and evidence-based advocacy focused on advancing the health and rights of children, adolescents and youth. Following roles with Save the Children and UNICEF, Louise worked as an independent consultant for several years supporting the Lancet and Financial Times Commission on Governing Health Futures 2030 and other organizations including Transform Health and PMNCH. In July 2023, Louise became the Policy and Research Coordinator at the DTH-Lab where she coordinates the consortium’s knowledge generation, analysis and policy influencing work.

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