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Ladies and gentlemen, in the very few minutes available to me, which I actually wanted to use to make a few brief comments on the whole topic of health care, I would like to follow up on the remarks of Mr. Schlange, whom we have listened to with great interest.
Mr. Schlange was right to speak of the seriousness of the situation. And perhaps I may add in these few minutes, from the point of view of a doctor, that the situation in Germany is indeed extremely serious from this perspective as well.
Ladies and gentlemen, I took the liberty of presenting you with a memorandum some time ago entitled “Unemployment: a public health problem”.
Ladies and gentlemen, 5 million unemployed in Germany means that 20 million in Germany are directly affected by this problem and the effects of the unemployment problem, and are affected first and foremost in the area of public health.
Ladies and gentlemen, when the directors of children's hospitals are already saying today that the deplorable state of affairs is vividly reminiscent of the worst hardships of the war years, when today there is talk again of pollution and vermin, which had disappeared for years and which can now be found again and again in the most diverse areas of Germany, when children could no longer be bathed because there was no more coal for heating, when there were no more suits, when children had no shoes, when it was found that in some families with several children, one child could only go to school today and the other child tomorrow because only one pair of boots were available [...]