Health and Social Care Committee is investigating how physical activity can impact healthspan
By Kath Hudson
The Health and Social Care Committee is looking into the benefits of physical activity on ageing Credit: Sport England
The Health and Social Care Committee is getting on board with physical activity
It is exploring how exercise can support health in the ageing population
An inquiry launched earlier this year received 140 submissions of evidence
The results will be made available in the coming weeks
The UK’s Health and Social Care Committee is actively looking at how physical activity can be used to improve the health and wellbeing of the older populations.
An inquiry was launched earlier this year calling for evidence of how physical activity can minimise and delay ill health as people age and how it can be used throughout older age to reduce the impacts of ill health and prevent the development of multi-morbidity and frailty.
The Committee will also be exploring how physical activity levels could have an impact on reducing the gap between older people in the most and least deprived regions.
Other areas of interest are how health services can work with social care, local government, the third sector and businesses to support older people to be more physically active, and the potential of broadening access to social prescribing.
The Chief Medical Officer has called for there to be a focus on maximising independence and minimising the time spent in ill health between reaching older age and the end of life. Progress on improving healthy life expectancy in England has stalled and people are spending longer living with ill health in their older years. While physical activity has been highlighted as playing an important role in preventing ill health, activity levels in England are lowest among older people.
The submission deadline was 7 August and the department has told HCM that 140 submissions were received which will be made public in the next couple of weeks.
A hospital redevelopment in the UK is set to create an age-friendly wellness neighbourhood designed ...
The Health and Social Care Committee is actively looking at how physical
activity can be used to
improve the health and wellbeing of the UK’s older population.
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
As the entrepreneur who started Wexer, Fresh Fitness, Fitness DK and Repeat, as well as being a former elite athlete, Rasmus Ingerslev’s life looked perfect from the outside, but onthe inside it was a different story. He talks to Kath Hudson about healing old wounds
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
Swim England has strengthened its sector-leading Business Solutions offer with the launch of
its Learn to Swim Growth Plan, designed to help aquatic providers unlock sustainable
programme growth.
CoverMe, the UK’s leading fitness workforce management and recruitment platform, has
partnered with Jobs In. Fitness, the specialist executive search and advisory firm for the
fitness and wellbeing sector, to give operators a single route to talent at every level –
from frontline staffing to C-suite.
Health and Social Care Committee is investigating how physical activity can impact healthspan
By Kath Hudson
The Health and Social Care Committee is looking into the benefits of physical activity on ageing Credit: Sport England
The Health and Social Care Committee is getting on board with physical activity
It is exploring how exercise can support health in the ageing population
An inquiry launched earlier this year received 140 submissions of evidence
The results will be made available in the coming weeks
The UK’s Health and Social Care Committee is actively looking at how physical activity can be used to improve the health and wellbeing of the older populations.
An inquiry was launched earlier this year calling for evidence of how physical activity can minimise and delay ill health as people age and how it can be used throughout older age to reduce the impacts of ill health and prevent the development of multi-morbidity and frailty.
The Committee will also be exploring how physical activity levels could have an impact on reducing the gap between older people in the most and least deprived regions.
Other areas of interest are how health services can work with social care, local government, the third sector and businesses to support older people to be more physically active, and the potential of broadening access to social prescribing.
The Chief Medical Officer has called for there to be a focus on maximising independence and minimising the time spent in ill health between reaching older age and the end of life. Progress on improving healthy life expectancy in England has stalled and people are spending longer living with ill health in their older years. While physical activity has been highlighted as playing an important role in preventing ill health, activity levels in England are lowest among older people.
The submission deadline was 7 August and the department has told HCM that 140 submissions were received which will be made public in the next couple of weeks.
A hospital redevelopment in the UK is set to create an age-friendly wellness neighbourhood designed ...
The Health and Social Care Committee is actively looking at how physical
activity can be used to
improve the health and wellbeing of the UK’s older population.
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
As the entrepreneur who started Wexer, Fresh Fitness, Fitness DK and Repeat, as well as being a former elite athlete, Rasmus Ingerslev’s life looked perfect from the outside, but onthe inside it was a different story. He talks to Kath Hudson about healing old wounds
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
Strength training is evolving,
driven by changing consumer
preferences. Julie Cramer talks
to innovators about how their
products are meeting this demand
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
New insight from Deloitte and Grant Thornton shows record growth, but the real shift is towards identity and perceived value, revealing opportunities to deepen engagement with members
CoverMe, the global leader in fitness workforce management, today launches CoverMe PT, an
on-demand personal training platform that connects the right personal trainer to the right
client in under 10 seconds.
Swim England has strengthened its sector-leading Business Solutions offer with the launch of
its Learn to Swim Growth Plan, designed to help aquatic providers unlock sustainable
programme growth.
CoverMe, the UK’s leading fitness workforce management and recruitment platform, has
partnered with Jobs In. Fitness, the specialist executive search and advisory firm for the
fitness and wellbeing sector, to give operators a single route to talent at every level –
from frontline staffing to C-suite.