Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 113 Part 3.djvu/637

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PROCLAMATION 7232—OCT. 1, 1999 113 STAT. 2155 every citizen to pay tribute to the members of onr fire and emergency services who have lost their lives or been injvired in service to their commmiities, and to those men and women who carry on their noble tradition. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this first day of October, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and ninety-nine, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and twenty-fourth. VI^ILLIAM J. CLINTON Proclamation 7232 of October 1, 1999 Child Healtii Day, 1999 By the President of the United States of America A Proclamation As America's children begin their exciting journey into the 21st centiiry, one of the greatest gifts we can give them is a healthy start; and we should recognize that the well-being of our young people includes both their physical and mental health. We have already made great strides in addressing children's physical health care needs through the C3iildren's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), which funds State efforts to provide affordable health insurance to millions of uninsured children. Sadly, however, as many as one in ten American children and adolescents today may have behavioral or mental health problems; and parents, teachers, and health care professionals need to realize that even very yoimg children can experience serious clinical depression. The majority of children who commit suicide are profoundly depressed, and Uie majority of parents whose children took their own lives did not recognize that depression until it was too late. My Administration is working to increase children's access to mental health care and to help commuinities expand coiuiseling, mentoring, and mental health services in our schools. In addition, we fought to ensure that funding for CHIP contains a strong mental health benefits component. While there is no substitute for pju^nts becoming and remaining involved in their children's lives, we must give families the tools they need to meet the challenges they face. Perhaps the most vital step we can take to ensure that every child reaches his or her full potential is to fight the stigma that prevents so many Americans with mental illness from making the most of their lives. In June of this year, under the leadership of Tipper Gore, we convened the first-ever White House Conference on Mental Health, where, among other important issues, we discussed hiaw to reach out to troubled yoimg people and put them on the path to mental and emotional health. The first and most crucial effort we can make is to talk honestly about mental illness and begin to dispel the myths that surround it. I am pleased that the Surgeon General and Mrs. Gore have committed to a major new campaign with these goals in mind. With powerful public service announcements and strong partners in the private sector, we can reach millions of Americans with a simple but Ufe-changing