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America
Talks Health Care
Tommy G. Thompson,
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
January 23, 2003
Austin, TX
Americans
need to get fit, U.S. health secretary says
At
Austin town hall meeting, Tommy Thompson says Bush has plan to promote
physical fitness
By
Mary Ann Roser
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Friday,
January 24, 2003
AUSTIN
-- Americans eat too much, exercise too little and rack up diabetes, heart
trouble and other chronic illnesses at alarming rates -- all prompting a
disease prevention forum and a $125 million Bush administrative initiative
announced Thursday by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy
Thompson.
Thompson
was in Austin to conduct the third of four town hall meetings about health
care sponsored by the nonprofit Public Forum
Institute.
"More
than 60 percent of Americans are overweight," Thompson said, adding
that he's lost 10 pounds and aims to lose 10 more. "I've got the whole
department on a diet."
In
the upcoming fiscal 2004 budget, Bush is proposing that Congress approve
$125 million for a new "healthy cities" initiative that would
provide money for walking trails and other programs aimed at preventing
diabetes, obesity and asthma, Thompson told several hundred people at the
forum in a downtown Austin hotel.
"Imagine
if Austin were declared a healthy city . . . if everybody in the city was
out and losing weight, walking," Thompson said. "It would be a
wonderful thing."
Thompson
also trotted out a Bush administration proposal to spend $1.75 billion over
the next five years to help disabled Americans make the transition from
nursing homes and other institutions to living in their communities. That
program includes $417 million for the upcoming year.
Three
things Texans can do to improve their health and extend their lives,
Thompson said, are: be active, don't smoke and eat fruits and vegetables. So
many of the chronic illness that strike 125 million Americans are
preventable, he said.
"It's
not so much that we die," said another speaker, aerobics guru Dr.
Kenneth Cooper of Dallas. "It's that we kill ourselves."
Texas
Health Commissioner Eduardo Sanchez, on the panel with Thompson, said the
state's future is cloudy because so many minority children are overweight,
don't go to college and become adults who drain health-care resources.
Hispanics and blacks are on the way to becoming the majority population in
Texas.
"The
physical health of Texas will determine its fiscal health," Sanchez
said. "This is a watershed moment for Texas -- and for America,"
which will follow the demographic trend.
Sanchez
said in an interview that the forum was refreshing because prevention
programs, such as physical education, good nutrition and vaccinations, make
healthier lives. Texas ranked last in the nation in childhood immunizations
in 2000 but improved to 43rd place in 2001, with about 75 percent of
children vaccinated. His goal is to push the rate to about 90 percent by the
end of the decade.
Austin
has a reputation as a healthy, fit city and was chosen for the forum because
of that track record, said Pam Stevens, a spokeswoman in Thompson's office.
Similar discussions were held in Minneapolis and Jacksonville, Fla., and a
fourth is planned for Los Angeles.
While
in Austin, Thompson dined with fellow Republicans, Gov. Rick Perry and
slimmed-down Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn, who did the cooking. And,
yes, Thompson said, they ate their vegetables.
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