 Hello everybody. My name is Neil O'Brollacon and I'm a researcher with the Insight Center for Data Analytics in NUI Galway. We have three minutes to save the world. This is three sys and three and I'm going to talk to you about three different types of data that we have analyzed for the project. We have analyzed environment data, health data and socioeconomic data and we've looked at this data in relation to three different subjects. One is to do with blue and blue spaces. One is to do with green spaces and the third one is to do with water quality. We've looked at this at three different levels and the three different levels we've looked at are regional at county level and at local level. Now we found actually that Ireland has three different regions and that those regions very much correlate in relation to all different categories. So we found that people are healthier in the eastern region, they're wealthier in the eastern region and we found out that they have much better access to blue and green spaces in the eastern region. We found that the northern and western region of Ireland, in fact they've got the lowest level of health of wealth and indeed of access to blue and green spaces and while there are many blue and green spaces in the west of Ireland, unfortunately the access levels are not very good in many cases. So you know we're simply talking about things like physical access and indeed psychological barriers as well. There's up to there's hundreds of different barriers that we've looked at in our research. Now in terms of our recommendations we have three recommendations and the three recommendations are as follows. We feel that there should be more data sharing between different agencies involved in health environment and indeed involved in blue and green spaces and the provision of such and water quality. And we found that in fact there should be better geo-alignment of data because we found health data particularly does not align in terms of a regional basis with the actual physical or administrative regions. So therefore the data needs to be massaged in order for it to fit. And the final thing we found is that usage of data at a local level needs to be improved. It needs to we need better data in order to correlate and right across the board and to provide better access figures at a local level. Now many years ago I met the Finnish Minister for Health and the Finnish Minister made it very clear that how they improve their health service is they put far more resources and effort into health prevention and health promotion. That's what we need to do in Ireland as well. We need to do that to try and to try and give everybody a fair crack at the whip. And therefore what we need is we need better data. We need to share data because at the end of the day not only do you know health services save lives but better data actually saves lives and that is what we found. Thank you very much.