Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2002-10-22-Speech-2-206"
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"en.20021022.7.2-206"2
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". – It is certainly true that the costs related to any health care are increasing day by day and year by year in the Member States. The fact of the matter is that public health professionals and, indeed, some governments are now giving more attention to investing more in health promotion and disease prevention. The emphasis in the past has all too often been on spending large sums of money on health care.
If this change takes place, as your question implies, that will greatly affect the issue of diabetes, on which you focus particularly in in your question, but also other diseases. I firmly believe that, when the public health programme is up and running under the three-stranded approach from January 2003, valuable information and data will be gathered under the first strand. Then, under the strand of health determinants, we will be able to promote the healthy lifestyle and balanced food intake that you mentioned in your supplementary question. I am looking into the correlation between, for instance, diseases like obesity and food, and I hope to report the results between now and the end of the year."@en1
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