
Prime Minister The Hon Patrick Manning
The Hon John Rahael, Minister of Health
Sir George Alleyne, Chancellor of UWI and UN Special Envoy to the Caribbean on
HIV/AIDS
Members of the Diplomatic Corps
Other Officials
Ladies and Gentlemen
It
is my pleasure to bring you greetings on behalf of the CARICOM Secretariat and
indeed the entire CARICOM Family. I take this opportunity to offer my sincerest
congratulations to Prime Minister Manning for the initiative he took at the
Heads of Government meeting in St. Kitts and Nevis in July this year in
offering to host a National Consultation and for delivering on that promise. I
am sure that without the efforts of the Minister of Health and his staff, this
would not have been possible. To Sir George Alleyne,, who has been in the
vanguard of health promotion in the Region for almost all of his working life,
no tribute could be too great. His leadership and commitment are fully
demonstrated in the yeoman effort as Chair of the Commission that produced the
seminal Report on Health and Development in the Caribbean, and the follow up
Report on the Prevention and Control of Non Communicable Diseases.
This
is a very important consultation for us in the Community, as it deals with some
of the most vexing health issues that require our serious and urgent attention.
I need not repeat the startling statistics on the non communicable diseases,
since these have been well documented in the background papers prepared for
this consultation. For me, among the most significant of the findings resulting
from this body of work, are the economic implications of the escalating
prevalence rates of diabetes, hypertension and obesity. It is important that we
find the formula to prevent and control these diseases, because they can be
prevented by and large, and they definitely can be controlled. The essential
questions however are: what polices do we need to pursue urgently? Who are to
be involved? And what are the costs? I expect that your deliberations would
help us to find the answers.
But
beyond these issues is the need to explore how, as a Region, we could
collaborate meaningfully in prevention and control. How, as a group of
countries that is enjoined in the enterprise of a CSME, do we embark on
policies for sharing services and resources and on functional cooperation?
Within
the Caribbean Community, we have the mechanism to pursue these policies and
programmes at the regional level. As you know, Health and Development falls
within the purview of the Directorate of Human and Social Development. In
addition, a series of Health institutions have the competences to contribute to
the research and practice that respond directly to the challenges posed by the
NCDs. Chief among these are CAREC, CHRC, CFNI and UWI and the other tertiary
level institutions. Of course, the prominent agency for health in the
Americas, PAHO, has contributed so much of the technical know how in the past
and is the major collaborator with CARICOM in the execution of the Caribbean
Cooperation in Health, which is now in its third phase (CCH III). We have
demonstrated how, by collaboration, we can achieve success as we did by being
the first region to eliminate polio and small pox.
The
NCD’s are a top priority within CCH III, and we need to use this forum today to
help redefine the scope of the agenda that we must pursue over the medium and
long run. Hence, I am pleased that the Hon Prime Minister in his intervention
on this topic at Heads of Government, in July 2006, conceived of this exercise
today as a precursor of a Regional Consultation in 2007 (of course after World
Cup Cricket). And I wish to thank him in advance for having Trinidad and Tobago
in the forefront of this regional encounter.
I
also recognize that besides PAHO, we must engage our international partners,
not only those in the field of health but those whose core mandates include
youth, sport, culture, education , labour. The issues that arise from
prevention and control of the NCDs impinge on the lives of workers, youth,
students, sports persons and ordinary citizens. We therefore have to come up
with a comprehensive strategy, with realistic objectives and a collective will,
to win the fight against the NCDs.
In
closing, I bring to this consultation the best wishes of the Caribbean Community,
firm in the conviction that the Health of the Region is the Wealth of the
Region.
Source: caricom.org