we still were stopped in our tracks by covid. the reality is we need to be investing in strong preventative care systems and primary care systems in a strong health workforce that is able to manage all of these different disease burdens and if we make those investments today we actually will have savings in the long run. we spend so much more reacting to disease than we do on the front side prevention. all right, dr vanessa kerry, the world health organization s special envoy for the climate change and health, thank you so much for being here. thank you. to the uk now, where the city of liverpool has been hosting ukraine s biggest pride march, kyiv pride. 0rganisers hope it ll cement the city s links with the country, after hosting this year s eurovision song contest on its behalf. 0ur correspondentjosh parry has more from liverpool.
scientists say will only become more extreme and more frequent in the future? it’s more extreme and more frequent in the future? in the future? it s not ust heatwaves i in the future? it s not ust heatwaves though. i in the future? it s not ust heatwaves though. it h in the future? it s notjust heatwaves though. it is i in the future? it s notjust - heatwaves though. it is extreme weather events, it is flooding and monsoons, there are going to be rising sea levels, it will be a change in vectorborne diseases, is the air pollution that again is killing someone every five seconds. we are getting hammered across every number of, you know, different aspects of our health by climate change and we have not done enough to prepare ourselves for this moment. the covid pandemic shows us that. despite all of the money that we put into various aspects of health all that was spent on health all that was spent on health like in the united states, we still were stopped in our tracks by covid. t
someone every five seconds. we are getting hammered across every are getting hammered across every number of different aspects of health by climate change aspects of health by climate change and we have not done enough change and we have not done enough to prepare ourselves for this movement. the pandemic shows this movement. the pandemic shows us this movement. the pandemic shows us that. despite all the money shows us that. despite all the money we put into various aspects money we put into various aspects of health, what we spend aspects of health, what we spend on health like in the united spend on health like in the united states, we were still stopped in our tracks by coronavirus. we need to be investing coronavirus. we need to be investing in primary care systems, strom health workforce that is systems, strom health workforce that is able to manage these disease that is able to manage these disease burdens. if we make those disease burdens. if we make those
the reality is we need to be investing in strong preventative care systems and primary care systems in a strong health workforce that is able to manage all of these different disease burdens. and if we make those investments today, we actually will have savings in the long run. we spend so much more reacting to disease than we do on the front side of prevention. all right, dr vanessa kerry, the world health organisation s special envoy for climate change and health. thank you so much for being here. thank you. around the world and across the uk. this is bbc news. bbc news bringing you different stories from across the uk. people on the streets of manchester are being balloted on life s biggest questions.
Despite investments in analytics, key patient attributes are often buried in a facility's electronic health record.This was the challenge facing The Villages Health (TVH). The 75-physician multi-specialty group was built at the request of The Villages active community living in central Florida, TVH has been aggressive in operating under value-based care models, including