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- Opening Remarks by Barbados P.M. at Summit On Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases
Opening Remarks by Barbados P.M. at Summit On Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases
- By S Coward
- Published 17-Sep-07
- CARICOM , Health/Medical
- Unrated
Failure to control factors engendering diseases
OPENING REMARKS BY THE RIGHT HONOURABLE OWEN
ARTHUR, PRIME MINISTER OF BARBADOS ON THE OCCASION OF THE REGIONAL SUMMIT ON
CHRONIC NON-COMMUNICABLE DISEASES, 15 SEPTEMBER 2007, PORT-OF-SPAIN, TRINIDAD
AND TOBAGO
It
is a wonderful feeling, as Prime Minister of Barbados, to be in a position to
welcome you, and to preside over a Conference in the
I offer a special welcome
to two Prime Ministerial Colleagues who are attending their first
We are determined to make
our Region succeed, and to do so, in large and increasing measure, by drawing
upon the spirit of cooperation that binds us in the form of our regional
integration process.
For our Region to succeed,
the actions and programmes that we promote must make a fundamental and decisive
difference to the wellbeing and the lives of our people in the course of their
ordinary and daily business.
And the regional
integration movement itself functions best as an instrument of our progress
when it serves to add great value to our individual domestic programmes for the
betterment of our people.
A Conference of this nature
therefore meets the highest test of relevance and urgency.
I have absolutely no doubt
that the quite considerable effort we have made over the past two decades to
refashion our domestic economy into the CSME will yield an impressive dividend
for the people of our Region.
Nothing must deter us from
continuing to build the new regional economy that is to be the CSME, and from
seeing it through to its successful completion. We can and must make parallel
gains on the social front.
Hence, at our recent
This Conference with the
theme, “Stemming the Tide of Non-Communicable Diseases in the
Non-communicable diseases –
cardiovascular disease, stroke, hypertension, obesity and some cancers – are
now the leading causes of death of our people. The prevalence of these diseases
in the Caribbean is the worst in the
It is also clear that
despite valiant efforts at the domestic level, a coordinated regional
partnership and programme is now required if we are to make the significant
advances required.
Already, over half of our
health expenditure meets the costs of treating NCDs. These costs are projected
to spiral, at a time when we face competing claims for our limited resources.
Failure to act can imperil
our very lives, not to mention the future of the Community as we know it.
As Heads of Government, we
are positioned to influence some of the critical factors contributing to the
high incidence of Non-Communicable Diseases, such as limited access to
appropriate health care and healthy foods. Indeed, the Caribbean Commission on
Health and Development has recommended that regional Governments seek to
improve access to better nutrition and health care for all our people. That is
a priority we cannot ignore.
In addition, our Region
must, as outlined for this Summit identify the appropriate mechanism for the
coordination of efforts for all our territories, including our Associate
Members, who are keen to participate in our efforts at cooperation. Presenting
a single call for reduction in NCDs via our media, programmes for our schools,
work places and health institutions, and a single research unit to avoid
duplication costs can all serve to meet our goal of reducing the incidence of
these diseases.
We have much experience to
draw upon from our Pan
In
We are represented here to
day to lend our full support to yet another regional initiative which will make
a substantive difference to the well-being of our people.
As Chairman of the
Conference of Heads, I wish to thank and to congratulate my colleague Head, the
Prime Minister of St. Kitts and
This nation has lent the
name of one of its most famous places to be as the symbol by which we most
identify our integration movement.
I trust that this Meeting
will come, like the Meeting at Chaguaramas over 30 years ago to be remembered
as another defining moment in Let us therefore to the
task.
