 Halibath a Iigwg, Rhun, hwn yn y cyfrifiad ac mae'r dod, a'r perffyn o'r gwahanol yng Nghaerfod고 Llywodraeth, a hefyd o'r gwahanol yng Nghaerfod Nath Beth yn trin iawn yn y casu a'r fawr, ac mae gennym ni'n debyg yna i'r unigol, sy'n cael ein rhan o'r llull honno'ch modd fawr, ac tyw'r gyfreunio am y tuzydd yma'r cyfrifiad ynaia. Rydw i'n fawr i'n meddwl, maen nhw'n ymddangos i'n cael ein bod'na a'r gwahanol i'ch a'n dweud o'r agendaeth sydd o'r mewn gwneud, a'n ddweud am ymgyrchu i'r cyffredinol, ac mae'r gweithio sydd wedi cael ei wneud i gael yng Nghymru yn y ddweud am y ddechrau, ac mae'n dweud am y gweithio. Mae'n gweithio'r program, mae'n ddweud o'r cyffredinol. Ac mae'n gweithio'r program sydd wedi cael ei wneud ychydig a'r cyffredinol o'r cyffredinol, I was very envious of both the richness of the diet that you had available to you, but also astonishingly impressed by the fertility of ideas that there are here in the NHS in Wales. It is a fantastic programme that you have had showing just what a range of possibilities there are that are being pursued actively by nurses throughout the NHS, and I think it's a fantastic tribute to what goes on that you have had the programme that you have had here today. And recognising through all of that a fundamental truth of the present health service that there is no choice but to change. All of us are faced with a future in which the age of austerity is combining with a set of demands for health services that mean no matter how much we might like it, things simply cannot stay the same. But the change that you are talking about today and the examples that you've got in front of you, I think show how even in really difficult times it is possible to be creative, it is possible to be thinking of new ways in which patients needs can be met, but it is also to do that in a way that displays a leadership to the rest of the sector, that we can find a way through the real problems that we know we all face together. But not only are you able to show that there is a way through these challenges, but you also I think are showing that when we are in a period of change it is also fundamentally important to know where our boundaries lie. We push at boundaries, but unless we know where our core values and principles lie, then that pushing becomes a directionless thing. Whereas when we know what our core beliefs, values and purposes are, then I think we are able to push at those boundaries in a way that remains consistent with the things that we know to be most important. And from where I stand as the Minister for Health in Wales, I am determined that we will go on in Wales having a health system that is properly planned, that is provided on the basis of equity, that is animated by a sense of public service. That it will remain a health service rooted in those things which have made it the most important and the most valued public service that we have. And I could see, I thought in the programme that you have here today, another core and fundamental truth about health, which is that it remains the last of course of the welfare state. But when the housing department has left your estate, when the social services department has retreated behind a call centre, when the electricity showroom has closed down, the health service remains the one place that you can go as a citizen and know that even in very difficult times and in very pressurised circumstances, you will meet another human being who is willing to hear your story, to listen to what you have to say and to respond to you as one human being would to another. And in what nurses do, that fundamental sense of a human encounter rooted in a belief that care is fundamental to what we do, I think is one of those rooting principles that means we can push boundaries without losing touch with the really important things that matter. That's why the quality of care will have run, I know, like a theme for everything that you have talked about here today. That's why the jobs that you do remain so valued by our fellow citizens. That's why the work that you do in all the different settings of the NHS across Wales continues to enjoy the support of people in Wales at a level and at a degree that would be the envy of any other public service. As we go ahead and as we reshape our health services for the future, making sure that we remain true to these rooting principles, I think is our guide through some difficult territory ahead. So I just wanted on behalf of the government in Wales but much more importantly on the part of those people in Wales who are coming to contact with you and your fellow workers day in and day out to say thank you so much for what you do. For you to know just how much it is appreciated. And for you to know that as you help us to shape the future that we look to design here in Wales, that appreciation, that sense of connectedness to the lives of other people will be an essential asset in shaping the future we wanted to bring about to you.