Thanks very much.
Thank you very much for the great presentations.
I want to confess from the beginning that as a family doctor sometimes maybe I didn't comment on obesity because I was afraid of...an eating disorder. In young girls we went through that phase where we were afraid that we were going to tip somebody over into anorexia. I just want to know whether there has been any work on what our reaction as physicians has been to that.
The other piece I would love to know is whether there are countries where kids have been involved. I know we didn't do very well on tobacco until we let the kids write the ads themselves. Adults writing for kids doesn't seem to work. Kids for kids...and the idea of de-normalization and the target campaigns. The kids really did a spectacular job once they were given the tools to do it for themselves.
My third question is this. In the operating room it's not possible to confuse two different chemicals or IV solutions because they're in a different coloured bottle or they're a different shape, or whatever. I have always had trouble with the fact that the bottles for juices are the same, whether they're 100% sugar or 100% juice. Do you think you should be able to put things in the same jar when actually one is fruit juice and the other is just sugar? It's not really a medical question. It's just that the engineers took over in the O.R. so that we as physicians couldn't screw up by hooking up the wrong things together.