Public Health Is Ecosystem Health
Press Release
Saltsprings,
Pictou County, N.S., December 27, 2005
David Orton, Green Party candidate for Central Nova,
was recently
asked by
the New Glasgow Evening News, along with the other
candidates in the riding, the question
"How can healthcare be
improved in Pictou County and would private
healthcare work here?"
Orton is running in this federal election under his
campaign theme,
"Make Peace With Nature, Vote Green."
Orton pointed out, "The
Greens believe that in order to have a
healthy population, we need a healthy environment.
Without
ecosystem
health there will be no long term public or
individual health, yet
we
pay scant attention to this here in Central Nova or
throughout
Canada. To have a healthy environment, we must also
pay attention
to
global warming and climate change."
He went on to say, "The
Green Party, and myself personally,
strongly
believe that whatever the problems in the public
health care
system,
and there are many, they have to be resolved within
the public
system. We totally oppose private health care. Our
problems in the
public health care system will not be solved by
creating a private
alternative, accessible only for those who can pay.
Recently four
very experienced OR nurses in the Truro hospital
left to work at a
private clinic in Dartmouth. While their decision
involved a number
of issues, the crucial point is that any 'private'
health care can
only exist by poaching nurses and doctors from the
public health
care
system and thus helping to
further undermine it." So when
private
health
care is being advocated as an individual 'solution' to a
person's
health problem, the overall collective system which serves
all of us
is undermined.
There are other issues that need to be addressed to
improve health
care.
Orton intends to try and raise these issues in Central Nova.
-
Orton said "The Green Party stresses
health prevention and
ecosystem health, but the federal and provincial governments
'legally' allow the discharges of chemical toxins from pulp and paper
mills, from power plants and from manufacturing plants which use
numerous toxic chemicals. (See on the internet the National Pollutant
Release Inventory, for discharges by the various industrial plants in
Pictou County.) While there may be some token treatment of wastes
that are discharged, all these plants degrade and contaminate our
local environment. A blind eye is foolishly turned by our so-called
regulatory agencies like the departments of the Environment and
Health, 'because we need the jobs'. We are often told, for example,
that the sulphur stench from the local pulp mill is 'the smell of
money.' This pollution has to end. Many of us have come to see a
relationship between smog-forming pollutants from industrial plants
and increasing asthma rates in the population."
- Orton
stressed, based on over 20 years of environmental activism
in
this
region, "What also has to end is the
widespread 'legal' use of
biocide poisons e.g. the herbicides and insecticides
used by the
forest industry, the herbicides, insecticides and
fungicides used
on
blueberry fields and on Christmas tree plantations,
the many
pesticides used by farmers, and the cosmetic
pesticides used on
lawns
and golf courses. These chemicals ultimately pollute
the bodies of
humans, as well as those of plants and animals, as
they are
discharged into the land, air or marine environments
and into our
communities. To have a sustainable health care
system and a healthy
population, we need a sustainable society, not one
that is
routinely
contaminated and that degrades the world around us."
- There
are social justice issues involved with adequate public
health
care, said Orton, "We need to
encourage more health
education,
improve housing, provide accessibility to low-income
housing, and
address poverty-related issues, specially child
poverty, as they
all
affect health. Mental health issues must be brought
out of the
closet
and taken seriously as pressing concerns for many
citizens."
- There
is also the issue of personal responsibility for one's own
health
and health care which cannot be overlooked, said Orton:
"This
means eating a healthy diet, and taking part in
regular exercise.
It
means putting away the ATV and snowmobile for health
reasons, as
well
as for their impact on wild animals, other people
and the
environment. We should not expect the health care
system to 'save'
us
from our overindulgence in food, smoking and
drinking, and a
self-imposed couch potato lifestyle."
- "As a senior myself," said Orton, "I would also like to raise the
subject of needing a full public discussion on
learning to age
gracefully and to not expect chemical and surgical
interventions to
continue until the day we enter the coffin. As one
becomes older
the
body does deteriorate and we must learn to accept
this."
-30-
Authorized by the Official Agent for David
Orton
Contacts:
Mark A. Brennan
Campaign
Manager for The Green Party Candidate for Central Nova, David
Orton
GREEN PARTY OF
CANADA
www.greenparty.ca
Phone Central
Nova Campaign Manager (902) 396 4397
Green Party
Candidate, David Orton (925) 925 2514
Email David
Orton: dorton@greenparty.ca
"Make Peace With Nature, Vote Green"
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Last updated: January 29, 2006