An Introduction to Population Level Prevention of Non-Communicable Diseases
Prof Mike Rayner, Dr Kremlin Wickramasinghe, Ms Julianne Williams, Karen McColl, and Dr Shanthi Mendis
Editorial Board
Mike Rayner is a Professor of Population Health at the Nuffield Department of Population health and Director of the British Heart Foundation Health Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention, based in the department. The Centre, which Mike founded in 1993, is a World Health Organisation Collaborating Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention and carries
out research in two main areas: the burden of cardiovascular disease and the promotion of healthier diets and increased levels of physical activity. Mike is also Chair of Sustain: the alliance for better food and farming and Chair of its Children's Food Campaign in the UK. He is a trustee of the UK National Health Forum, Chair of the Nutrition Expert Group for the European Heart Network based in Brussels and a member of the Scientific
Advisory Panel of the International Obesity Task Force. He is also an ordained priest in the Church of England. Kremlin Wickramasinghe joined the British Heart Foundation Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention (BHF CPNP) in 2009 to work on the epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and associated risk factors. He also collates and produces statistics for regular publications for the British Heart Foundation. The BHF CPNP was awarded the status of World Health Organisation Collaborating Centre on Population Approaches for Non-Communicable Disease Prevention in 2013 and Dr Wickramasinghe is the Co-Director of the Collaborating Centre. He is also the Course Director for the Short course on prevention strategies for non-communicable diseases organised, on a regular basis, by the BHF CPNP. Julianne Williams joined the British Heart Foundation (BHF) Centre on Population Approaches for NCD Prevention in October 2012 to work on the coronary heart disease statistics compendia and an analysis of the food environment around schools. Her research interests include the relationships between obesity, socio-economic status, and the food environment as well as how technology can be used to improve our
understanding of these associations. Karen McColl is a freelance consulant based in Lotissement La Thuile, Montagny, France. Dr Shanthi Mendis coordinates the global program for Prevention and Management of noncommunicable diseases at the World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland. She has been the Senior Adviser/coordinator of the World Health Organization cardiovascular and noncommunicable diseases programs from 2000. Dr Mendis served as Professor of Medicine, at the Faculty of Medicine, Peradeniya Sri Lanka from 1979 for twenty years. She is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and a Fellow of the American College of Cardiology. She received post-doctoral training in the United Kingdom and USA, and has wide experience in Global Health, Internal Medicine, Cardiology, Policy development and Research in developing countries and has published widely.