Bill Davenhall: Your health depends on where you live

85,276 views ・ 2010-01-25

TED


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00:15
Can geographic information
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make you healthy?
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In 2001 I got hit by a train.
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My train was a heart attack.
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I found myself in a hospital
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in an intensive-care ward,
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recuperating from emergency surgery.
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And I suddenly realized something:
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that I was completely in the dark.
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I started asking my questions, "Well, why me?"
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"Why now?" "Why here?"
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"Could my doctor have warned me?"
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So, what I want to do here in the few minutes I have with you
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is really talk about what is the formula for life and good health.
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Genetics, lifestyle and environment.
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That's going to sort of contain our risks,
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and if we manage those risks
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we're going to live a good life and a good healthy life.
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Well, I understand the genetics and lifestyle part.
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And you know why I understand that?
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Because my physicians constantly
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ask me questions about this.
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Have you ever had to fill out those long,
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legal-size forms in your doctor's office?
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I mean, if you're lucky enough you get to do it more than once, right?
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(Laughter)
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Do it over and over again. And they ask you questions
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about your lifestyle and your family history,
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your medication history, your surgical history,
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your allergy history ... did I forget any history?
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But this part of the equation I didn't really get,
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and I don't think my physicians
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really get this part of the equation.
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What does that mean, my environment?
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Well, it can mean a lot of things.
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This is my life. These are my life places.
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We all have these.
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While I'm talking I'd like you to also be thinking about:
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How many places have you lived?
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Just think about that, you know, wander through
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your life thinking about this.
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And you realize that you spend it in a variety of different places.
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You spend it at rest and you spend it at work.
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And if you're like me, you're in an airplane a good portion of your time
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traveling some place.
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So, it's not really simple
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when somebody asks you, "Where do you live, where do you work,
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and where do you spend all your time?
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And where do you expose yourselves to risks
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that maybe perhaps you don't even see?"
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Well, when I have done this on myself,
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I always come to the conclusion
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that I spend about 75 percent of my time
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relatively in a small number of places.
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And I don't wander far from that place
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for a majority of my time,
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even though I'm an extensive global trekker.
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Now, I'm going to take you on a little journey here.
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I started off in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
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I don't know if anybody might hail from northeastern Pennsylvania,
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but this is where I spent my first 19 years
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with my little young lungs.
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You know, breathing high concentrations here
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of sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide
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and methane gas,
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in unequal quantities -- 19 years of this.
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And if you've been in that part of the country,
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this is what those piles of burning, smoldering coal waste look like.
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So then I decided to leave that part of the world,
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and I was going to go to the mid-west.
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OK, so I ended up in Louisville, Kentucky.
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Well, I decided to be neighbors to a place called Rubbertown.
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They manufacture plastics. They use large quantities chloroprene
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and benzene.
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Okay, I spent 25 years, in my middle-age lungs now,
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breathing various concentrations of that.
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And on a clear day it always looked like this, so you never saw it.
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It was insidious and it was really happening.
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Then I decided I had to get really smart,
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I would take this job in the West Coast.
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And I moved to Redlands California.
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Very nice, and there
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my older, senior lungs, as I like to call them,
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I filled with particulate matter, carbon dioxide and very high doses of ozone.
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Okay? Almost like the highest in the nation.
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Alright, this is what it looks like on a good day.
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If you've been there, you know what I'm talking about.
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So, what's wrong with this picture?
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Well, the picture is, there is a huge gap here.
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The one thing that never happens in my doctor's office:
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They never ask me about my place history.
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No doctor, can I remember, ever asking me,
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"Where have you lived?"
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They haven't asked me what kind of the quality
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of the drinking water that I put in my mouth
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or the food that I ingest into my stomach.
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They really don't do that. It's missing.
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Look at the kind of data that's available.
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This data's from all over the world --
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countries spend billions of dollars investing in this kind of research.
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Now, I've circled the places where I've been.
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Well, by design, if I wanted to have a heart attack
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I'd been in the right places. Right?
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So, how many people are in the white?
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How many people in the room have spent the majority of their life
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in the white space?
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Anybody? Boy you're lucky.
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How many have spent it in the red places?
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Oh, not so lucky.
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There are thousands of these kinds of maps
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that are displayed in atlases
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all over the world.
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They give us some sense of what's going
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to be our train wreck.
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But none of that's in my medical record.
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And it's not in yours either.
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So, here's my friend Paul.
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He's a colleague. He allowed his cell phone to be tracked
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every two hours, 24/7,
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365 days out of the year
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for the last two years, everywhere he went.
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And you can see he's been to a few places around the United States.
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And this is where he has spent most of his time.
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If you really studied that you might have some clues
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as to what Paul likes to do.
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Anybody got any clues? Ski. Right.
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We can zoom in here, and we suddenly see
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that now we see where Paul has really spent a majority of his time.
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And all of those black dots are all of the
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toxic release inventories
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that are monitored by the EPA.
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Did you know that data existed?
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For every community in the United States,
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you could have your own personalized map of that.
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So, our cell phones can now build a place history.
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This is how Paul did it. He did it with his iPhone.
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This might be what we end up with.
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This is what the physician would have
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in front of him and her when we enter that exam room
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instead of just the pink slip that said I paid at the counter. Right?
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This could be my little assessment.
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And he looks at that and he says,
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"Whoa Bill,
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I suggest that maybe you not decide,
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just because you're out here in beautiful California,
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and it's warm every day,
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that you get out and run at six o'clock at night.
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I'd suggest that that's a bad idea Bill,
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because of this report."
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What I'd like to leave you for are two prescriptions.
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Okay, number one is, we must teach physicians
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about the value of geographical information.
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It's called geomedicine. There are about a half a dozen programs in the world right now
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that are focused on this.
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And they're in the early stages of development.
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These programs need to be supported,
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and we need to teach our future
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doctors of the world
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the importance of some of the information
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I've shared here with you today.
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The second thing we need to do
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is while we're spending billions and billions
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of dollars all over the world
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building an electronic health record,
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we make sure we put a place history
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inside that medical record.
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It not only will be important for the physician;
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it will be important for the researchers
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that now will have huge samples to draw upon.
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But it will also be useful for us.
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I could have made the decision, if I had this information,
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not to move to the ozone capital
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of the United States, couldn't I? I could make that decision.
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Or I could negotiate with my employer
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to make that decision
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in the best interest of myself and my company.
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With that, I would like to just say that Jack Lord said
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this almost 10 years ago.
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Just look at that for a minute.
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That was what the conclusion
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of the Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare was about,
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was saying that we can explain the geographic variations
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that occur in disease, in illness, in wellness,
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and how our healthcare system actually operates.
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That was what he was talking about
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on that quote.
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And I would say he got it right almost a decade ago.
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So, I'd very much like to see us begin to
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really seize this as an opportunity to get this into our medical records.
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So with that, I'll leave you that
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in my particular view of view of health:
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Geography always matters.
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And I believe that geographic information
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can make both you and me very healthy. Thank you.
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09:17
(Applause)
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