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FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Interview: Dr Zoe Williams

The Royal College of General Practitioners has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for GPs. Dr Zoe Williams, one of the project’s clinical champions – and a former TV Gladiator – tells Kate Cracknell how this will work, and why it’s so important

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 10
Dr Williams says drugs have their place, but prevention is key
Dr Williams says drugs have their place, but prevention is key
GPs see far too much of the same people – and these are precisely the people fitness professionals should be seeing more of - Dr Zoe Williams

You’re a practising GP, but you’re also a TV doctor. With this access to the public ear, what are the key messages you try to get across?
Hippocrates had it bang on when he said: “If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise – not too little and not too much – we would have found the safest way to health.”

I try to remind people that our health is predominantly in our own hands. Though we’re privileged to have access to the wonders of modern day medicine, this is no substitute for healthy lifestyle – both diet and exercise – when it comes to disease prevention, disease treatment and general happiness and wellbeing.

You collaborate with PHE on its ‘Everybody Active, Every Day’ framework. How can that framework be translated into a compelling message that gets people moving?
One in six deaths are caused by inactivity, which we categorise as doing less than 30 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity each day. That’s as many deaths as are caused by smoking!

Rebranding ‘exercise’ as ‘physical activity’ and discussing how walking, cycling and even everyday chores can count makes being active seem much more achievable. Breaking physical activity down into 10-minute bursts can be more acceptable to people too, especially when they’re starting out, rather than aiming to be active for 30 minutes at a time. #10minutebursts

How do we drive the preventative healthcare agenda when there’s still such a heavy a reliance on drugs?
Drugs aren’t going anywhere and that’s a good thing – there’s certainly a place for them in our healthcare system. However, I firmly believe that lifestyle advice should exist wherever there’s a drug that could be prescribed.

At each patient contact where a drug is discussed, prescribed or issued, healthcare professionals should also be delivering brief advice about lifestyle, be it physical activity, diet, alcohol, smoking or stress control.

The NHS has adopted the ‘Make Every Contact Count’ (MECC) approach, as have many other organisations including local authorities and those in the health and fitness industry. MECC is an approach to behaviour change that uses the millions of day-to-day interactions organisations and individuals have with other people to support them in making positive changes to their physical and mental health and wellbeing. You can find more information here: www.health-club.co.uk/mecc

How important is physical activity in delivering your vision of preventative healthcare?
Physical activity is at the epicentre of health and wellness and is often the first step for individuals in their journey towards a healthier life. Becoming more active can have immediate, as well as longer term, improvement in symptoms, mood and wellbeing. It’s also been shown to reduce the likelihood of other harmful lifestyle choices, such as smoking.

The RCGP has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for GPs over the next three years.

What does that mean in practice?
The overall aims are to provide the primary care workforce with focused, reliable, evidence-based information to prevent and manage lifestyle-related diseases.

This will be achieved though research into the barriers that prevent GPs from promoting physical activity – we will review current literature and guidance to ensure GPs have access to a set of agreed, evidence-based guidance and tools. There will also be health promotion and disease prevention strategies, and new materials developed for patients and commissioners.

We’ll seek to involve GPs in decision-making around how best to implement changes. In fact, one our first tasks will be engaging with GPs via a questionnaire.

How else can we overcome GPs’ reluctance to promote physical activity to patients?
Public Health England – as part of its ‘Everybody Active, Every Day’ strategy – provides a free training package to GPs, as well as to hospital doctors, nurses and midwives. I’m one of a team of GP clinical champions delivering this training, which is available across England.

For further information about the PHE clinical champions, or to book a training session, please email: [email protected]

How do you inspire your own patients to get active?
Sometimes it’s as simple as ‘giving them permission’ to do so. Some patients just need to hear that being active is safe and a good thing to do.

It may seem obvious to some of us, but a diagnosis such as hypertension can, for some, lead to a lack of confidence and concerns that exercise may not be safe. This can be exacerbated if they’re asked to complete forms which highlight certain conditions, such as high blood pressure, as potentially meaning it’s unsafe for them to exercise. I’ve experienced patients being completely put off and alienated from exercise due to this.

Explaining that physical activity actually forms an important part of managing their medical condition can have a hugely positive impact. I also find out what the patients’ own motivations are, as well as what they enjoy or have enjoyed in the past. Finally, I help them break down whatever barriers are standing in their way by adopting a motivational interview style in my consultation with them.

Is there a role for gyms?
Of course. Fitness centres have the facilities, the staff/expertise and the experience to help people be more active. GPs see far too much of the same people – and these are precisely the people fitness professionals should be seeing more of.

Working in partnership will be key to redressing this balance – and I’ve seen good examples of such partnerships where the gym offering has been taken into the GP surgery. This can help patients overcome the fear of ‘the gym’ and helps GPs become more engaged and involved.

Walking groups initiated from the gym or GP surgeries are another great way to introduce inactive people to exercise – and to fitness professionals.

How much of a credibility issue is there – will GPs ever see fitness providers as true partners?
There may be a general perception that there are credibility issues when it comes to the regulation of the fitness industry and the variation in training of fitness professionals. Exercise and dietary advice can vary and conflict from professional to professional. However, in my experience, GPs are happy to refer patients into ‘exercise on referral’ schemes run by REPs Level 4-qualified professionals.

I recognise that building stronger links between GPs and local physical activity initiatives and providers is key, especially with the current enthusiasm from the health and fitness sector to work with those who are inactive or affected by disease. However, it’s important that messages being shared with patients – from both healthcare professionals and fitness professionals – are consistent. We need to look at ways to ensure this is delivered moving forwards.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Zoe Williams was one of the TV Gladiators, codename Amazon
Zoe Williams was one of the TV Gladiators, codename Amazon
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/288931_21276.jpg
Making physical activity promotion a priority for GPs: Dr Zoe Williams explains how
Dr Zoe Williams, GP Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health club Management,Dr Zoe Williams, Kate Cracknell, #10minutebursts, NHS Make every contact count, Royal College of General Practitioners, Public Health England,
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features

Interview: Dr Zoe Williams

The Royal College of General Practitioners has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for GPs. Dr Zoe Williams, one of the project’s clinical champions – and a former TV Gladiator – tells Kate Cracknell how this will work, and why it’s so important

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2016 issue 10
Dr Williams says drugs have their place, but prevention is key
Dr Williams says drugs have their place, but prevention is key
GPs see far too much of the same people – and these are precisely the people fitness professionals should be seeing more of - Dr Zoe Williams

You’re a practising GP, but you’re also a TV doctor. With this access to the public ear, what are the key messages you try to get across?
Hippocrates had it bang on when he said: “If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise – not too little and not too much – we would have found the safest way to health.”

I try to remind people that our health is predominantly in our own hands. Though we’re privileged to have access to the wonders of modern day medicine, this is no substitute for healthy lifestyle – both diet and exercise – when it comes to disease prevention, disease treatment and general happiness and wellbeing.

You collaborate with PHE on its ‘Everybody Active, Every Day’ framework. How can that framework be translated into a compelling message that gets people moving?
One in six deaths are caused by inactivity, which we categorise as doing less than 30 minutes of moderate intensity physical activity each day. That’s as many deaths as are caused by smoking!

Rebranding ‘exercise’ as ‘physical activity’ and discussing how walking, cycling and even everyday chores can count makes being active seem much more achievable. Breaking physical activity down into 10-minute bursts can be more acceptable to people too, especially when they’re starting out, rather than aiming to be active for 30 minutes at a time. #10minutebursts

How do we drive the preventative healthcare agenda when there’s still such a heavy a reliance on drugs?
Drugs aren’t going anywhere and that’s a good thing – there’s certainly a place for them in our healthcare system. However, I firmly believe that lifestyle advice should exist wherever there’s a drug that could be prescribed.

At each patient contact where a drug is discussed, prescribed or issued, healthcare professionals should also be delivering brief advice about lifestyle, be it physical activity, diet, alcohol, smoking or stress control.

The NHS has adopted the ‘Make Every Contact Count’ (MECC) approach, as have many other organisations including local authorities and those in the health and fitness industry. MECC is an approach to behaviour change that uses the millions of day-to-day interactions organisations and individuals have with other people to support them in making positive changes to their physical and mental health and wellbeing. You can find more information here: www.health-club.co.uk/mecc

How important is physical activity in delivering your vision of preventative healthcare?
Physical activity is at the epicentre of health and wellness and is often the first step for individuals in their journey towards a healthier life. Becoming more active can have immediate, as well as longer term, improvement in symptoms, mood and wellbeing. It’s also been shown to reduce the likelihood of other harmful lifestyle choices, such as smoking.

The RCGP has made physical activity and lifestyle a clinical priority for GPs over the next three years.

What does that mean in practice?
The overall aims are to provide the primary care workforce with focused, reliable, evidence-based information to prevent and manage lifestyle-related diseases.

This will be achieved though research into the barriers that prevent GPs from promoting physical activity – we will review current literature and guidance to ensure GPs have access to a set of agreed, evidence-based guidance and tools. There will also be health promotion and disease prevention strategies, and new materials developed for patients and commissioners.

We’ll seek to involve GPs in decision-making around how best to implement changes. In fact, one our first tasks will be engaging with GPs via a questionnaire.

How else can we overcome GPs’ reluctance to promote physical activity to patients?
Public Health England – as part of its ‘Everybody Active, Every Day’ strategy – provides a free training package to GPs, as well as to hospital doctors, nurses and midwives. I’m one of a team of GP clinical champions delivering this training, which is available across England.

For further information about the PHE clinical champions, or to book a training session, please email: [email protected]

How do you inspire your own patients to get active?
Sometimes it’s as simple as ‘giving them permission’ to do so. Some patients just need to hear that being active is safe and a good thing to do.

It may seem obvious to some of us, but a diagnosis such as hypertension can, for some, lead to a lack of confidence and concerns that exercise may not be safe. This can be exacerbated if they’re asked to complete forms which highlight certain conditions, such as high blood pressure, as potentially meaning it’s unsafe for them to exercise. I’ve experienced patients being completely put off and alienated from exercise due to this.

Explaining that physical activity actually forms an important part of managing their medical condition can have a hugely positive impact. I also find out what the patients’ own motivations are, as well as what they enjoy or have enjoyed in the past. Finally, I help them break down whatever barriers are standing in their way by adopting a motivational interview style in my consultation with them.

Is there a role for gyms?
Of course. Fitness centres have the facilities, the staff/expertise and the experience to help people be more active. GPs see far too much of the same people – and these are precisely the people fitness professionals should be seeing more of.

Working in partnership will be key to redressing this balance – and I’ve seen good examples of such partnerships where the gym offering has been taken into the GP surgery. This can help patients overcome the fear of ‘the gym’ and helps GPs become more engaged and involved.

Walking groups initiated from the gym or GP surgeries are another great way to introduce inactive people to exercise – and to fitness professionals.

How much of a credibility issue is there – will GPs ever see fitness providers as true partners?
There may be a general perception that there are credibility issues when it comes to the regulation of the fitness industry and the variation in training of fitness professionals. Exercise and dietary advice can vary and conflict from professional to professional. However, in my experience, GPs are happy to refer patients into ‘exercise on referral’ schemes run by REPs Level 4-qualified professionals.

I recognise that building stronger links between GPs and local physical activity initiatives and providers is key, especially with the current enthusiasm from the health and fitness sector to work with those who are inactive or affected by disease. However, it’s important that messages being shared with patients – from both healthcare professionals and fitness professionals – are consistent. We need to look at ways to ensure this is delivered moving forwards.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Zoe Williams was one of the TV Gladiators, codename Amazon
Zoe Williams was one of the TV Gladiators, codename Amazon
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/288931_21276.jpg
Making physical activity promotion a priority for GPs: Dr Zoe Williams explains how
Dr Zoe Williams, GP Kate Cracknell, Editor, Health club Management,Dr Zoe Williams, Kate Cracknell, #10minutebursts, NHS Make every contact count, Royal College of General Practitioners, Public Health England,
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Kerzner International has signed deals to operate two new Siro recovery hotels in Mexico and ...
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Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more ...
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Short-term incentives to exercise, such as using daily reminders, rewards or games, can lead to ...
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With the launch of its 49th John Reed, RSG Group is looking for more opportunities ...
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Featured supplier news: Webinar: Building a new energy future for the leisure sector
As one of the most energy-intensive industries in the UK, leisure facilities face a critical challenge in balancing net zero goals, funding and increased costs.
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Company profile: Life Fitness
The Life Fitness family of brands offers an unrivalled product portfolio, providing customers with access ...
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Company profile: Serco Leisure
Serco Leisure Operating Limited is one of the UK’s leading national operators of leisure centres, ...
Supplier Showcase
Supplier showcase - Jon Williams
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Greenwich Leisure Limited press release: ‘FAB’ freebies for Barnet carers!
Being a carer – whether that’s looking after a young person, a senior citizen or someone with a long-term illness or disability – can be rewarding but stressful at times. These responsibilities may also limit the carer’s ability to find paid employment.
Featured press releases
FIBO press release: FIBO 2024: Billion-euro fitness market continues to grow
11 to 14 April saw the fitness industry impressively demonstrate just how innovative it is in fulfilling its responsibility for a healthy society at FIBO in Cologne. Over 1,000 exhibitors and partners generated boundless enthusiasm among 129,668 visitors from 114 countries.
Directory
Salt therapy products
Himalayan Source: Salt therapy products
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Lockers
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Diary dates
23-24 May 2024
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Diary dates
30 May - 02 Jun 2024
Rimini Exhibition Center, Rimini, Italy
Diary dates
08-08 Jun 2024
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Diary dates
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Diary dates
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Diary dates
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Diary dates
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Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
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Diary dates
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