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Health challenge to all Scots
17/03/2003
The challenge of transforming the health of Scotland's
population was spelled out today in a new programme of
improvement.
Improving Health in Scotland- the Challenge creates a framework
for potential progress in four priority areas:
- Early Years- stressing the importance of infant
and child health to later life.
- Teenage Transition- helping during a time of change and
conflicting pressures on young people to support
healthy choices. All schools will be health promoting
schools by 2007
- Workplace- shifting to engage employers in
improving health at work. Good physical and mental
health means a happier and more productive
workforce.
- Communities - active health improvement though
new Community Planning Partnerships bringing together
NHS, local authority and voluntary sector at local
level.
Underpinning the challenge is more than £250m of
Executive funding for the next three years. This comprises
£173m announced last September in the Scottish Budget and
existing health improvement funding.

The Challenge highlights 44 action points including
bringing health improvement into the fore across the public
sector planning and taking in diet, exercise, and promoting
mental well being. Scottish researchers have made
significant contributions in these areas.
It also stresses the importance of spreading good
practice - where good schemes in one community can be
applied elsewhere. Three national demonstration projects -
Starting Well based in Glasgow, Have a Heart Paisley, and
Healthy Respect in Lothian - are already up and running and
providing a great insight into making a difference to
people's quality of life.
At the Healthy Scotland Convetion in Edinburgh, Deputy
First Minister Jim Wallace said:
"This is the first time all levels of government in
Scotland have joined together for the common purpose of
improving health. More importantly, there is now a clear
vision which can be shared by NHS boards, local authorities
and a whole range of voluntary bodies to rise to this
challenge.
"Health is much more than treating symptoms of disease
and health improvement is no longer a matter just for the
Health Department. It is a matter for us all.
"The visionaries who created the National Health Service
in the 1940s predicted demand on the NHS would fall as we
became healthier. But we all know that much greater effort
is required to achieve this. It means a seismic change in
the way we as individuals view our health but it will bring
enormous benefit to ourselves and future generations of
Scots."

Health Minister Malcolm Chisholm said:
"We can only bring about long-term and sustainable
improvement by attacking the causes of ill-health and
promoting positive health and well being. That is why the
Executive is laying down this challenge.
"There are many encouraging examples all over Scotland
where communities are adopting a can-do approach to
improving health, including diet, being more active and
promoting mental and physical well being.
"But the scale of the Challenge is immense and we need
to do a lot more. For too long deprivation and poverty have
kept too many people on the low road to ill-health. There
is no short term fix but we have to take radical measures
now - and make the investment now - which will put Scotland
back on the high road to good health."
He continued:
"It is true that Scotland has recently had a poor health
record. It is also true that many aspects of health have
improved: there are fewer premature deaths from heart
disease and cancer and overall life expectancy has risen
across Scotland. However, improvement is not taking place
fast enough and a step change is required.
"We have to challenge lifestyles as well as change life
circumstances. The issues for Scotland are similar to those
facing many developed countries and include an increase in
sedentary behaviours and an increased consumption of junk
food.
"Together we can do a great deal. Central and local
government can do a lot. So can employers, schools and the
voluntary sector. And so can individuals, taking some
responsibility for their own health and well being."
National attention to health improvement was first
prompted by the poor physical state of Scottish recruits
for the Boer War. This resulted in the 1902 Royal
Commission which examined physical training for children,
the importance of a nutritious diet and the links between
ill-health and poverty.
Scottish researchers have been international leaders in
this area. John Boyd-Orr's work on nutrition firstly at the
Rowett Institute in Aberdeen and later as a Government
adviser, earned him a Nobel Prize.
Shetland-born Sir Douglas Black wrote the classic work
on health inequalities and followed this up ten years
later. Endorphins - natural opiates in the brain which
provide the feel-good benefit from exercise - were
discovered by Professor Hans Kosterlitz in Aberdeen in the
early 1970s.
In 1991 Vera Carstairs and Russell Morris used Scotland
as the basis for their book on deprivation and health which
found the widest disparities in Glasgow. It has since
become a standard index.