Editor’s letter
Activity to save lives

Physical activity will be a clinical priority for GPs for the next three years, with doctors offered training and support to help them get people active. But if fitness – as a subset of activity – wants to benefit, it must up its game

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 8


One in six deaths could be prevented by getting the public more active... yet the professionals with the authority and credibility to steer us towards this course of action, namely GPs, “often feel ill-equipped – due to lack of training, time and incentives – to discuss physical activity with patients”. So says Dr Zoe Williams, GP clinical champion for physical activity for Public Health England (PHE) and the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP).

Fair to say there are trailblazers out there: the likes of Dr William Bird, with his passion for outdoor activity (see p10), and Dr John Morgan, “the GP who prescribes walking” who hit the headlines back in 2014. But as a general rule, doctors don’t feel confident in offering exercise advice, because it was never included in their original training.

This is a gap that urgently needs to be plugged. GPs and their teams deal with 90 per cent of NHS patient contacts, and Ipsos MORI research shows they’re far and away people’s primary source of advice on how to stay healthy: 57 per cent of people would ask their GP for such advice; only 1 per cent would ask a personal trainer. If GPs could be brought around to a preventative healthcare message, the impact on public health – and the sustainability of the NHS – could be huge.

So there’s cause for celebration with the news that the RCGP has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for the next three years, including training to support GPs in delivering this agenda. Meanwhile PHE’s new Health Matters report says GPs should exercise themselves, to be role models for their patients, and should mention physical activity in every consultation.

So is this the breakthrough our sector has been waiting for? We’ve been tantalisingly close before now. After much lobbying, exercise finally made it onto the Quality and Outcomes Framework – which rewards GPs for adhering to specified practices – in April 2013, only to be removed again a year later. Meanwhile ukactive has run successful pilots placing exercise professionals in GP surgeries, but as yet no national roll-out. And exercise referral, in spite of being around for decades, remains disjointed across the UK, with only isolated pockets of best practice.

These latest announcements could mark a turning point, but the gym sector has some work to do if it wants to be involved. As Everyone Health’s Annie Holden told HCM recently: “In the health world, people are disdainful of leisure delivering healthcare.” (See HCM June 16, p44)

Everyone Health has proven its worth in the healthcare sphere, while Nuffield Health (see p32) is a shining example of joined-up thinking, bringing gyms into partnerships with hospitals to deliver wellbeing across the spectrum. But how many more operators can emulate this?

Of course, not every gym has to go down this route. But with gym penetration rates only growing very slowly, the profile of members barely changing, and a flurry of preventative healthcare opportunities suddenly coming our way as reported in this page over recent months – from PHE’s healthy lifestyle campaign, One You, to inactivity becoming Sport England’s priority #1; and from Healthier You, the NHS-led diabetes prevention programme, to this RCGP initiative – there’s never been a better time for our sector to spread its wings.

So let’s put our energy behind upskilling our workforce: EuropeActive is pushing for qualifications at Level 5 and above (see p16), while CIMSPA wants to recognise those with medically-credible skills via a ‘Chartered Professional’ seal of approval. Let’s make gyms more welcoming (see again the inspirational Dr Bird on p10), but also get out into the community. Let’s offer GPs free access, so they know first-hand the benefits. And let’s develop a model that focuses as much on behaviour change as on fitness and performance.

The new national agenda is about physical activity more broadly; if the gym sector wants to be a part of this, it needs to prove it.

Kate Cracknell

[email protected]

@healthclubkate

 


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SELECTED ISSUE
Health Club Management
2016 issue 8

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Leisure Management - Activity to save lives

Editor’s letter

Activity to save lives


Physical activity will be a clinical priority for GPs for the next three years, with doctors offered training and support to help them get people active. But if fitness – as a subset of activity – wants to benefit, it must up its game

Kate Cracknell
Activity is on the agenda – but will gyms be included? shutterstock

One in six deaths could be prevented by getting the public more active... yet the professionals with the authority and credibility to steer us towards this course of action, namely GPs, “often feel ill-equipped – due to lack of training, time and incentives – to discuss physical activity with patients”. So says Dr Zoe Williams, GP clinical champion for physical activity for Public Health England (PHE) and the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP).

Fair to say there are trailblazers out there: the likes of Dr William Bird, with his passion for outdoor activity (see p10), and Dr John Morgan, “the GP who prescribes walking” who hit the headlines back in 2014. But as a general rule, doctors don’t feel confident in offering exercise advice, because it was never included in their original training.

This is a gap that urgently needs to be plugged. GPs and their teams deal with 90 per cent of NHS patient contacts, and Ipsos MORI research shows they’re far and away people’s primary source of advice on how to stay healthy: 57 per cent of people would ask their GP for such advice; only 1 per cent would ask a personal trainer. If GPs could be brought around to a preventative healthcare message, the impact on public health – and the sustainability of the NHS – could be huge.

So there’s cause for celebration with the news that the RCGP has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for the next three years, including training to support GPs in delivering this agenda. Meanwhile PHE’s new Health Matters report says GPs should exercise themselves, to be role models for their patients, and should mention physical activity in every consultation.

So is this the breakthrough our sector has been waiting for? We’ve been tantalisingly close before now. After much lobbying, exercise finally made it onto the Quality and Outcomes Framework – which rewards GPs for adhering to specified practices – in April 2013, only to be removed again a year later. Meanwhile ukactive has run successful pilots placing exercise professionals in GP surgeries, but as yet no national roll-out. And exercise referral, in spite of being around for decades, remains disjointed across the UK, with only isolated pockets of best practice.

These latest announcements could mark a turning point, but the gym sector has some work to do if it wants to be involved. As Everyone Health’s Annie Holden told HCM recently: “In the health world, people are disdainful of leisure delivering healthcare.” (See HCM June 16, p44)

Everyone Health has proven its worth in the healthcare sphere, while Nuffield Health (see p32) is a shining example of joined-up thinking, bringing gyms into partnerships with hospitals to deliver wellbeing across the spectrum. But how many more operators can emulate this?

Of course, not every gym has to go down this route. But with gym penetration rates only growing very slowly, the profile of members barely changing, and a flurry of preventative healthcare opportunities suddenly coming our way as reported in this page over recent months – from PHE’s healthy lifestyle campaign, One You, to inactivity becoming Sport England’s priority #1; and from Healthier You, the NHS-led diabetes prevention programme, to this RCGP initiative – there’s never been a better time for our sector to spread its wings.

So let’s put our energy behind upskilling our workforce: EuropeActive is pushing for qualifications at Level 5 and above (see p16), while CIMSPA wants to recognise those with medically-credible skills via a ‘Chartered Professional’ seal of approval. Let’s make gyms more welcoming (see again the inspirational Dr Bird on p10), but also get out into the community. Let’s offer GPs free access, so they know first-hand the benefits. And let’s develop a model that focuses as much on behaviour change as on fitness and performance.

The new national agenda is about physical activity more broadly; if the gym sector wants to be a part of this, it needs to prove it.

Kate Cracknell

[email protected]

@healthclubkate


Originally published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 8

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