Portugal creates National Observatory on Aging
The first National Health Environment Observatory (ONE) was born in Alte, in the municipality of Loulé, which will retrieve and analyze data relating to the entire life cycle of the population for the proportion of healthy measures. The initiative involves three universities.
The space opens next Monday, March 21, and will be attended by the Minister of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, Ana Mendes Godinho.
ONE is coordinated by the Algarve Biomedical Center (ABC), the NOVA Medical School of the Universidade Nova de Lisboa and the University of Porto, and aims to encourage collaboration between public, private and civil society institutions for the study of aging. They are also part of several partners and public entities and private projects.
With one million euros of education, aims to promote education and investment that aims to create and develop the development of education, as tools for education and development of education as tools for creation and development of education as tools for education and development , as education and development tools to understand population needs and dynamics.
Speaking to Lusa, Nuno Marques, president of the Algarve Biomedical Center and spokesperson for the Algarve Biomedical Center, said that the project is “to propose some political measures and help the decisions to implement measures in the area of planning that have an impact on those who the observatory analyses”.
The space will be inaugurated on Monday, March 21st, at 3 pm, at Rua Nova da Igreja, nº3, and will be attended by the Minister of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, Ana Mendes Godinho, and the Secretary of Deputy State and Health, António Sales.