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Paul McNamara's avatar

I don't know what the situation was in the UK but I am old enough to remember the debate around seatbelts in Aus. That came in the seventies before Tobacco Control discovered/invented passive smoking. I distinctly remember the argument around slippery slopes and that it would open the floodgates for all kinds of interventions into personal freedoms. They were right and we have been paying for it ever since.

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John Bowman's avatar

The problem is it stopped being Public Health some years ago and became Private Health. The former deals with thing that affect the grand public at large: food hygiene; sanitation; clean water; epidemics, for example, but now it’s all about our waistlines, what food we eat, how much exercise we take, smoking, drinking, going for screening tests, and our mental health. This justifies the increasing number of prodnoses on the public payroll, and lots of scope for ‘research’ and grants, and ‘experts’ on stipends.

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