Released 13/03/2009

It's a day when school children go to school looking like tomatoes, when sane people bathe in baked beans and when workers around the country don clown noses and rattle buckets trying to raise cash.
Comic Relief is a great time when people club together to raise funds for a plethora of different projects, both at home and abroad.
The BBC aired a programme last night which followed a range of celebrity figures as they pushed themselves to breaking point by climbing Mount Kilimanjaro for the appeal.
During this moving programme, there were clips of the celebrities meeting with malaria sufferers in impoverished African villages, where medical care is so far removed from what we are accustomed to it is hard to believe this plight still goes on in the 21st century.
In one of the clips, Strictly Come Dancing winner Alesha Dixon visited a family whose life had been ripped apart by malaria, a woman whose husband had died and whose six children were suffering from the disease. She commented how lucky we were to have our NHS. Dixon remarked that no matter if people complain about healthcare in this country, we are so fortunate to have such good care provision.
We really are lucky to have a system that ensures everyone is looked after, everyone is cared for in their hour of need and everyone has easy access to a GP. Sometimes things need to be put into perspective before we realise how blessed we are and that fate could very easily have dealt us a different hand.
Don't forget Comic Relief - it's for a very worthy cause. Not everyone has a health system as advanced as our NHS, but if we all help and are all aware of the struggles of others, perhaps their goal of building a similar model to ours could become that little more achievable.