. Page 1 . >>MALE SPEAKER Good afternoon. We are about to begin our program for this great luncheon. First let me begin by introducing myself. I am Michael Steele. I'm the Lieutenant Governor of this great State of Maryland. America is a strong place to live through healthy hearts and minds, and it gives me a real pleasure to be here this afternoon to welcome and introduce one of the leaders, the leader in health prevention awareness for all of us. We are very proud that the Secretary decided to hold this very, very important summit in Maryland and hope all of you will take advantage of the sights and the sounds of our inner harbor of the great City of Baltimore. There is plenty for you to see and do and all I ask is for you to put the pedometer on, keep track, keep moving. It's a privilege to introduce the Secretary as our luncheon presenter. The Secretary has invited all of you to join with him and indeed the President in putting prevention first and this is the first step to a HealthierUS and to those of you in Maryland a healthier Maryland. We are excited about that. Let me share with you a bit about the man that we are going to hear, who is an innovative thinker, and certainly a strong promoter at the Department of Health and human services. Secretary Thompson is the . Page 2 . nation's leading advocate for the health and welfare of all Americans, and he has dedicated his professional life to public service. He became Secretary of the department, which employs more than 60,000 personnel in February of 2001. Prior to this, he served as Governor of Wisconsin and we watched him very closely here in Maryland taking some very important cues from him. Secretary Thompson made his -- made state history when he was reelected to office for a third term in 1994 and a fourth term in 1998. It says something about the power and the influence of a man, the people of this great state love him enough to keep him in leadership. During his 14 years as Governor, he focused on revitalizing Wisconsin's economy. He gave attention to his leadership in welfare reform, education and expanded access to healthcare for low income people and those of you who are involved in low income communities and access to healthcare resources, you know what a challenge that is and to have an advocate for them at the highest levels of government is also very, very important. Secretary Thompson began his career of public service in 1966 as a representative in the Wisconsin state assembly. He received numerous awards for his public . Page 3 . service, including the Anti-Defamation League's Distinguished Public Service Award. In 1997, the Secretary received the Governing magazine's Public Official of the year award, and the Horacia Alger award in 1998. The Secretary served as chairman of the National Governors' Association, the Education Commission of the States and the Midwestern Governors' Conference. Secretary Thompson served in the Wisconsin National Guard and the Army reserve. He received a BS from the University of Wisconsin Madison. And it gives me a great deal of pleasure to introduce to you an advocate, the Secretary of the Department of Health and human services, Tommy Thompson. (Applause.) >>TOMMY G. THOMPSON Governor Steele, let me say thank you. Thank you for your passion, your leadership and what you are doing here in the great State of Maryland. We are in your debt and thank you so very, very much. What a party! Do you know that they didn't have a dining room in the hotel or any of the surrounding hotels big enough to fit all the individuals who have come to a prevention convention. Thank you (Applause.) . Page 4 . Thank you! And am I enthused. I can just feel, it's almost palpable the enthusiasm and the degree of excitement about doing something about prevention. And I tell you, I'm in your debt. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for being here, being involved, and yes, ladies and gentlemen, we can change the nations because of you. Thank you. (Applause.) A summit like this just doesn't happen. You know, you have an idea. I come up with these ideas. I have ten ideas a day, but only one is a good one and my staff has to find out which one that is. And this was one of the good ones, and then I have such great staff. And Elizabeth Majestic, she actually put this on with her staff and what a job she has done. (Applause.) Just you're a delight and I thank you. And I'm blessed. I have -- as the Secretary of the department, I have 65,000 employees. I hate to say this about the other departments, but I've got to tell you ladies and gentlemen, I've got the best employees working for the Department of Health and Human Services. And each and every one of them I think is a star. They are all here. I'd just like to have the HHS family stand up so I . Page 5 . don't miss any one of them. But they are all stars and I thank each and every one of them. (Applause.) Down here is Dr. Ken Morasugu. He is a very special of mine. He is the deputy Secretary of the Surgeon General and you bet the wonderful Surgeon General, Richard Carmona is just doing a wonderful job. But Dr. Morasugu lost his wife and he donated her organs. And then he lost his daughter in an automobile accident, and he donated her organs. I don't know if any of one would be in the category of suffering that much. But then to have the wisdom and the ability and the intellectual foresight to decide to do that is a wonderful human being, and he is one of those great people we have in the department. I love to single them out, because he is an example of giving, of sharing, and making things happen. And when you realize that 84,000 Americans, our fellow brothers and sisters all across America, are waiting for an organ and we will only have 22,000 receive them this year, we need to get the message out that the good Lord does not want your organs in heaven. He wants your soul. And we have to make sure that we give our organs -- (Demonstration Interruption.) . Page 6 . >>TOMMY G. THOMPSON This is a prevention convention. And we are going to save the global fund. In fact -- (Applause.) In fact, 55 percent of the money, 55 percent of the money going to global fund comes from the United States of America. (Applause) And I happen to be the chairman of the global fund, of the Board, and I'm going to save it and improve it, even without the help of the demonstrators. (Applause.) But you know something ladies and gentlemen, I got interested in prevention because my father died from diabetes and a heart attack. My mother died from cancer and it could have been easily detected. And my brother has epilepsy or had epilepsy. And you learn, you know, through life that being healthy is really God's gift. What we need to do is we need to take care of ourselves and our families and our communities. One point oh he 1.4 trillion dollars we spend this year on healthcare in America. And that's going to go to, by 2011, that is going to jump to $2.8 trillion. And ladies and gentlemen, we cannot afford that, even though we are the most powerful wealthy country in America. . Page 7 . And it is time for us, ladies and gentlemen, to take our message on prevention across America, from the sidewalks to the main streets of every community, all the way to the state houses and to the White House, and the President is with us and we need to convince every American to start eating properly, stop smoking, and lose weight and to exercise, ladies and gentlemen. It's not rocket science and we have got to do a much better job. (Applause.) We spent $155 billion this past year on tobacco related (inaudible) and there is no reason why anybody should smoke. I know maybe some of you in this room smoke and I don't want to preach to you -- yes. I do. I want you to get out and I want you to talk to people and tell them that it's poison. If you smoke a cigarette, you shorten your opportunity to live a quality life. 400,000. 19 percent of the deaths last year were because of tobacco related illnesses. And I go around the Humphrey building outside and I see some of my wonderful great employees go out, and they are out there smoking cigarettes and I go out there, take the cigarette out of their mouth, true. And I tear it up and stomp it down and I tell them I love them and I need them. The country needs them. Their family needs . Page 8 . them. And they should not smoke. They of course look a little perplexed. I'm sure some day I'm going to get slapped. And I know I'm going to get sued. But that doesn't bother me because I get sued every day anyways. But you know, it's what we need to do. We need to go out and tell America to stop smoking. And if we're going to have the biggest impact on health dollars, that is one way we can do it. and I know a lot of you can do the same thing. And when you see somebody smoke, just politely say you know it's not good for your health. They will look strange, but maybe we can get that message across, just like J. Everett Koop started the message years ago and we had the message across America. Let's ratchet it up and let's take the Koop message out across the byways and tell America, stop smoking. And I can assure you that tobacco companies -- (Applause.) Tobacco companies don't need the money from our cigarettes. And we can do a much better job. Diabetes. One of my real passions. When I see my very good friend Fran Kaufmann here, who is the head of the American Diabetes Association. She traveled all over America with me and for me and I've been to California for her and doctor Speigel from NIM. 132 . Page 9 . billion dollars a year on diabetes related illnesses and 200,000 Americans die. At NIH, which does such a great job, and Dr. -- where is Dr. Ellias. He does a great job. NIH did a great job under the auspices of Dr. Spiegel and they concluded the study after 2 and a half years, after 3500 people were involved in the testing program. It was supposed to run five years, but after 2 and a half years, it was so conclusive, they said that if you walk 30 minutes a day, and you lost 10 to 15 pounds, we would reduce the incidence of diabetes by 60 percent. Now, with 17 million Americans that are diabetic, 16 million more that are prediabetic, if we don't do something in the next five years, that 132 million dollars will be 265 to 300 billion dollars a year and we can do something. And we have to go to the Native American communities, the African-American, the Hispanic communities, because it's an epidemic in those minority communities and we want to make sure that we get the message out. Eat properly. Walk. And we will be able to reduce the incidence of diabetes by 60 percent. And I need you, ladies and gentlemen, to carry that message to every community across America and I thank you for your passion and your compassion and I thank you for the wonderful job that each of you have . Page 10 . -- that you do in regards to this thing. And we can make it happen. The third thing -- (Applause.) The third thing is obesity. Obesity, 117 million dollars. And all of us, you know, chunky is good, but healthier is better. You know, we look around and we don't have to look too far. We can look at each other in the mirror each morning and some of us, including me, can lose a few pounds. I put the whole department on a diet. And you know something? It works. People start making -- thinking about their diet. They start losing weight. And once they start losing weight, they feel better about themselves. Dr. Bender over here tells me that he heard me speak and he lost 15 pounds and I think that's darn good. Stand up so we can applaud you for 15 pounds. (Applause.) Dr. James Marks, who is doing a great job on prevention, he heard the message and he lost how many, 20 pounds? 15. (Applause.) Stand up. James Marks. I'll tell you, right there. I tell the people in the department, how can we go out and talk about prevention if we look fat? And how can . Page 11 . we go out and talk about diabetes when we ourselves don't exercise. So if we are going to be in the Department of Health, we are going to act like the Department of Health. We are going to get healthy ourselves and we are going to spread that message across America and that's what we're doing and that's what you need to do and you need to take it back to your communities all across America and that's how we will change human nature and human habits and we will be able to improve the quality of health of every American. Are we going to do it ladies and gentlemen? I say it's time we do it. (Applause.) And then of course we have got these little walking meters. You know, some people think, you know, they're a little foolish. I wear two of them, to make sure that they count correctly. I don't want to -- I want to make sure, you know, that I'm not over doing it. I want to make darn sure that I've got my 10,000 steps in. But you've got them in your pamphlets today. You've got them in your packages. I want you to put them on and wear it. You know, they become addictive and you know what? You start looking at them and deciding, you know, I haven't done my 10,000 steps today. And so you start walking up the . Page 12 . steps instead of taking the elevator. Instead of eating that hamburger and cheeseburger that you decide you'll take a walk out in the park over lunch hour. And that's what we have to do. And so I want you to do it. I want you to sign up and put that walk a meter. I wear it every day. I hand them out. They cost 15 bucks a piece. So I tell the people, I'm a conservative. Don't let me down. That's taxpayers' money. You've got to use it. And we do it. And now you've gout an individual, James hill from the University of Colorado. He has his own walk-a-meter, ped-a- meter program. And he hands them out to students and he wants to get people to sponsor it all over America. I think it's a good idea. Let's start competing. Let's start to be able to develop wayness which we do the right thing, get these out and make sure that people do it. And ladies and gentlemen, we also, we have some great ideas out there. I had the opportunity this morning, you know, to listen to some individuals that came in and talked to me about how we can work together. And some of the ideas, you know, there is an individual here from -- Roger Greenlaw, from Rockford, Illinois, which is a suburb of Wisconsin -- (Laughter.) Well, it is. And Roger Greenlaw started a program . Page 13 . called CHIPS, Coronary Health Improvement Programs. He is a doctor. He starts teaching this program in Rockford and he started getting people referred to him from other doctors. And they started talking about eating properly. Then they went out into the corporations and now they have got 27 restaurants in Rockford that has at least five healthy meals on their menu and each one of them, they have a sign in their restaurant. That's an example that we can replicate across America. Dyersville, Iowa, a small community, also a suburb of Wisconsin, Dyersville, Iowa, everybody walks. Everybody decided to lose weight, get out and start walking. Now it has become contageous and everybody in the community is doing it. The hospital association up in Maine has got a program on healthy living. And what we want to do is we want to replicate those programs all across America. So we decided, I took the idea to the President, took it to Congress, they gave us $15 million this year, and we are going to hand out $15 million for healthy cities. Small communities and large cities, to show what they can do to develop a way to be able to reduce diabetes, obesity, set up walking trails, reduce asthma, reduce smoking, and then be able to be declared a healthy city. Can you imagine what that is going to mean for . Page 14 . those communities that get designated as a healthy city? They can put that on their, when they come into town, when they leave town, hand it out in the hotels and the motels that this city has been declared by the President of the United States and the director of HSS as a healthy city. It will attract individuals who want to live in a healthy community. Hopefully next year we will bet 125 million dollars. In two weeks you can apply for this money. So I want to you go back to your community, find out if your community wants to do it. Sign up for these dollars, and then let's set up action agendas in each one of the communities and be able to do something like Dyersville, like Rockford and like all the communities across America. John Streep, the Mayor of Philadelphia said we are eating too many cheese staeks. Let's put the whole city on a diet. What is wrong with that? That is a wonderful example that we can do this all across America. And that's what the announcement is in regards to the healthy cities. Then I had a chance to meet with the Michael Melkin Foundation and I also meet with Pepsico today and they decided -- Pepsi hasn't agreed to, but I'll embarrass them if they don't, so I'm sure they will. I . Page 15 . had one idea, I decided at 11:30 this morning, about an hour and a half ago, the Melkin Foundation pledged 200,000, it came to me over lunch. At the end of the year, we will have a President seal or a secondary medal for the best community, the largest, the smallest, the best hospital, the best company, the best individual to do something on prevention. We are going to have a big party, a big dinner, and we are going to hand this out, just like the Baldridge award. And we will do it this year, we will not wait. And I want to thank Pepsico and Melkin Foundation for coming up with the dollars in order to do it, ladies and gentlemen. (Applause.) This convention is an action oriented convention. And the third thing I found out is I brought in a lot of your groups and I said you know we have such great ideas here. Everybody around the table was pumped up and excited today and they decided you know we have to do something. And I said you know? We are all talking about the same thing. Why don't we come together? Why don't we come together with an organization, and I don't care who wants to be involved in it. You'll have to select some people and I hope you do that. Let's develop an action agenda before we leave tomorrow on ten things we can do. Ten things, . Page 16 . things that we want Congress to do. And if we go to Congress and ask for some money, we can do it, ladies and gentlemen. Because you individuals are motivated and I'll tell you, Congress and a bipartisan basis, I talked to them, they want to do something about healthcare in America and about prevention. Let's do something in regards to communication. Let's get the right people and media together. They can do some programs. And we can highlight it all across America. Let's do something for healthy cities and get everybody together and let's go and get an action agenda and let's work on that action agenda. Let's have ten items, and let's have a summit each year and find out how well we're doing on a report card and how well we're doing on improving the quality of health of every American. That's what this convention is all B. and with your help we can do it. You are 1,000 messengers all across America. You're the individuals with the passion, the compassion, the intellect and the ability, you know what has to be done. Now let's go out and do it, ladies and gentlemen. (Applause.) How excited I am about what we can do together as partners to make it happen. And I did want to mention just a bit about AIDS, because they came in. We have . Page 17 . a serious problem in the world on HIV/AIDS. I have been to Africa. Chairman of the global AIDS fund currently. And here in America we do not recognize the problem as much as we used to. And we have got to make sure that we do not let down our vigilance. But we also have to let America know about this insidious disease until we find a vaccine or find a treatment that is going to prevent it. I've been to Africa. I've been to Botswana where 37 percent of the country is infected. The country is going to have a very difficult time surviving. As a lot of countries are, when you have that number of people infected. Therefore, if those countries start failing, that's going to be a tremendous economic problem for the United States and for the world economy. And that's why it's important that the United States of America to stand up and take this fight on, just like we are taking on the fight on prevention. And we need to you go out and carry that message as well, ladies and gentlemen. And I know that you will and I thank you very much for that. (Applause.) And finally -- and finally, my other cause that I'm fighting on right now, besides prevention and many others is my quest to build women and children's clinics . Page 18 . in Afghanistan. I'm going to Afghanistan on Easter Sunday to open up our first clinic. I was there in October. And I was absolutely horrified to find out that 16 percent of the babies in that country die in childbirth. It's the worst country in the world for maternal health, maternal deaths. One out of four children die before age 5. And I sent three expatriots over there before I went in October, individuals who were born, raised, and educated in Afghanistan, now practicing medicine in the United States. They went back there. They made an assessment for me. And they found out that there are no medical -- really very few medical facilities for women and children because the Taliban destroyed them. They destroyed the laboratories, the equipment in the medical schools. And I decided then that it would be wonderful for America to stand up and build maternal children clinics. We can show the Muslim world that the United States of America cares for women and children. And what a way to show the difference between the Arab world, like Iraq and like the Taliban and like the Al-Queada, they are peddling hatred and we come back and do what is right for the women and children. I came back and we got money to build the first clinic and we are going back there on Easter . Page 19 . Sunday and opening up the first clinic. And I'm taking some expatriots back with me and they are going to teach midwifery so that the women will be able to teach other women how to birth and raise children. And I tell you this, because there are so many wonderful things, wonderful people, wonderful corporations and wonderful things happening in America. And for those individuals who want to come in and demonstrate. That's well, that's their American right. But I want to tell you there is so much good going on in this world and in this country, and if we keep doing it, ladies and gentlemen, we can improve the quality of health of every American, but we can also improve the quality of health of citizens worldwide. That's why I got in to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. With what we are doing, we can do so much more. So ladies and gentlemen, you're 1,000 messengers. You're individuals that can carry this message all across America. And we need your help. And together, ladies and gentlemen, we can improve it so the quality of health of ever American and hopefully every person that lives in the world is better tomorrow than it is today. That's why you're in healthcare. That's why you're in prevention. That's why I'm Secretary. So it's partners, . Page 20 . ladies and gentlemen, as partners we have a great opportunity to continue to improvement. So God love you and God love the United States of America. So thank you very much. (Applause.) . . .