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SHWF in Germany (with photos)

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In Berlin, Germany, the Secretary for Health, Welfare and Food, Dr York Chow, had the opportunities to meet with the German Federal Minister of Health, Mrs Ulla Schmidt, and the State Secretary, Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection, Mr Gert Lindemann.

He had also had an in-depth discussion on food safety issues with the Federation Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety.

The Federal Minister of Health offered some insights into the German healthcare system. It was noted that healthcare took up a large proportion of the national expenditure, with contribution also coming from employers and the individual apart from taxation.

To tackle the ever-increasing expenditure in healthcare, like many other places including Hong Kong, Germany was embarking on a more proactive approach of encouraging the public to more actively take care of their own health by leading a more healthy lifestyle, thereby reducing the number of medical consultations and hospital stay.

Coinciding with Dr Chow's views, the Minister reckoned that preventive care should always stay in the forefront of cure while rehabilitation was an area that needed be more heavily emphasised.

In the meeting with the Federation Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety, Dr Chow was given a good understanding of the German system of food safety assurance.

Dr Chow was informed that apart from relying on the European Union as a gatekeeper in monitoring food imports, the German Federal made good use of electronic facilities including the Internet to keep a watchful eye on potential threats.

It was noted with interest that coincidentally, Hong Kong Centre for Food Safety was also widely using the Internet to complement official sources of information.

Elaborating further, the meeting pointed out that individual states had also had the obligation to gather intelligence at their own level to inform Federal, while the importers and wholesalers were legally bound to make sure that their supplies were safe for consumption.

The State Secretary, Mr Gert Lindemann, told Dr Chow that the German government was making efforts to enhance consumers' right to information and that a consumer information law had been put to the Parliament. Upon the enactment of which, consumers would enjoy the right to seek clarification of claims in food from the suppliers.

Mr Lindemann remarked that unlike some countries, the German government did not subscribe to the stance that it was the government's responsibility to advise consumers whether a food was healthy to eat, adding that the role of his government was to provide sufficient information for the consumers to make a decision of their own.

Dr Chow paid a courtesty call to the Chinese Ambassador to Germany, Mr Ma Canrong.

In his next stop, Dr Chow will be in Geneva, Switzerland to attend the World Health Organisation's "60th World Health Assembly" as a member of the Chinese delegation.


Ends/Saturday, May 12, 2007
Issued at HKT 17:35

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12 Apr 2019