MAJORITY REPORT. CHAPTER IV. THE RELATED SCHEMES OF SOCIAL WELFARE. GENERAL NATURE OF THE HVIDENCE. 29. In the very brief summary contained in Chapter IT we have described the Health Insurance Scheme viewed as a seif- contained system, and have intentionally refrained from looking beyond its borders. Our reference, however, permits and, indeed, requires us to examine the relationship in which the Scheme stands to those other activities of the State which are concerned with the promotion of the health of the nation. We take the view that any element of those other schemes which reacts in a substantial way upon the working of the system of Health Insurance appropriately comes within our purview. 30. Accordingly we have received and considered evidence relating to the various Public Health services as exemplified in the schemes of Maternity and Child Welfare, the arrange- ments for dealing with infectious diseases, tuberculosis, and venereal diseases, and the work of the Port Sanitary Authorities. All these services have a very direct bearing on National Health Insurance inasmuch as, by removing conditions prejudicial to the health of the community, or by the provision of remedial measures, they tend to diminish the volume of sickness and so to reduce expenditure on sickness and disablement benefits. We have also taken notice of the problems of the Poor Law medical service in its relation to medical benefit, and have con- sidered the extent to which the cash payments provided as sickness and disablement benefit require to be supplemented by the grant of relief under the Poor Liaw. We have, further, heard evidence as to the system of medical inspection in factories, which is administered by the Home Office ; and of medical inspection and treatment in schools, which is supervised by the Board of Fducation. To a less extent we have considered the Unemploy- ment Insurance Scheme. The main features of that scheme are, of course, outside our reference. But the problems created by the inequality in the rates of cash benefits under the Health and Unemployment Insurance Schemes and the possibility of devising measures to secure from the Employment Exchanges certification of genuine unemployment as evidence for the excusal of arrears under the Health Insurance Scheme, have to a limited extent brought the Unemployment Insurance system under our review. 31. The Ministry of Health have submitted to us (in App. CIV) a statement as to the services concerned with the public health, maternity and child welfare, infectious diseases, tuber- culosis. venereal diseases, port sanitation and medical relief and