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Lancet Commission on Adolescent Health and Wellbeing

Relative to other ages, this is the largest generation of adolescents and young adults aged 10 to 24 years that the world will ever have. In some low and middle-income countries more than one in three of the total population is a ‘young person’.

The rapid improvements in child health and survival in many countries have not been matched by improvements in the health of adolescents and young adults.

This demographic transition is being paralleled by an equally fast epidemiological transition. At the same time as the burden of infectious disease is declining, non-communicable diseases including injuries, mental health, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease, diabetes and obesity are increasing dramatically. These conditions commonly have their origins in childhood and adolescence. In 2013 The Lancet partnered with four leading academic institutions (The University of Melbourne, The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University College London and Columbia University) to establish a Commission on Adolescent Health and Wellbeing. 

The landmark report, Our future: a Lancet commission on adolescent health and wellbeing, was published in 2016. It identified the major challenges confronting adolescents globally and was authored by 30 leading experts from 14 countries, including Burnet Institute researchers Dr Elissa Kennedy and Professor Peter Azzopardi.

The Commission highlights priorities for action and calls for key investments across sectors to assure the health of this and future generations, and to tackle the leading causes of poor health in adulthood

The six recommendations from the report will now provide the framework for a Lancet Standing Commission, committed to actions for adolescent health and wellbeing for a further 5 years.

Relative to other ages, this is the largest generation of adolescents and young adults aged 10 to 24 years that the world will ever have. In some low and middle-income countries more than one in three of the total population is a ‘young person’.

The rapid improvements in child health and survival in many countries have not been matched by improvements in the health of adolescents and young adults.

2015 - current

As part of the ongoing agenda of the Commission, Burnet continues to contribute to work to describe global and regional progress in adolescent health (Progress in adolescent health and wellbeing: tracking 12 headline indicators for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2016 and Adolescent health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: findings from the global burden of disease 2015 study) as well as improved understanding of this critical developmental and its implications for future health (The age of adolescence and Adolescence and the next generation). 

Burnet is also contributing to the upcoming second Lancet Commission of adolescent health and wellbeing.

Elissa Kennedy

Doctor Elissa Kennedy

Contact Doctor Elissa Kennedy for more information about A Profile of Adolescent Health in Myanmar.

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Funding Partners

  • The Centre for Adolescent Health, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)

Partners + Collaborators

  • Centre for Adolescent Health, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute School of Population and Global Health
  • University of Melbourne Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation
  • London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine University College London
  • Columbia University
  • Drexel University
  • University College London
  • George Washington University
  • Edith Cowan University
  • University of Ibadan
  • University of Washington
  • FIA Foundation
  • APHRC
  • YIELD Hub
  • Peace Research Institute Oslo
  • University of California
  • John Hopkins University
  • RMIT University
  • Peking University
  • Karolinska Institute
  • University of the Witwatersrand
  • Princeton University
  • HSRC
  • Centre for Environmental Health
  • Monash University
  • Columbia Unviversity
  • University of Kansas
  • WHO
  • UNICEF
  • UN Women