Showing posts with label NHS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHS. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Where's the legacy?


Guest post: Mike Farrar, chief executive of the NHS Confederation.


This year we've witnessed the success of the greatest show on earth and we have been hearing a lot about health and wellbeing legacy-is there one? I'd argue there is and it's been created by staff in NHS organisations up and down the country.

In July 2010 myself and David Nicholson launched the NHS 2012 sport and physical activity challenge. The aim: to improve NHS staff health and wellbeing, reduce sickness absence and improve productivity using the inspirational power of London 2012, providing opportunities as part of or linked to their working day.



Why sport and physical activity and why the workplace?


When asked 'what are the barriers to you engaging in sport/physical activity?' many people cite the fact that they work full-time and don't have the time to exercise. I was keen to utilise that eight hour slot in people's working day to enable them to become more active. Not necessarily to push them in the direction of gyms or formal sporting activities but to create opportunities that engage them.


Why physical activity? The evidence base for the benefits of being active is very strong but the recent research into the impact of physical inactivity should be of greater concern to all of us.


Why sport? The power of the brand of sport to engage people in local communities cannot be underestimated. There are some fantastic examples of local rugby, football and cricket clubs collaborating to improve the health of local populations and we've collaborated with them to provide opportunities for NHS Staff in their workplace -touch rugby; NHS cricket; NHS football 5s.


Did it work?


In Leeds NHS staff clocked up more than 1million active minutes;


NHS in Somerset saved in the region of 100k by participating in the NHS Sport and Physical Activity challenge;


In NW over 60% of NHS orgs said staff were more engaged


In one London NHS org 75% of staff said:


-their attendance had improved


-More than 80% said they were finding it easier to carry out their work duties


In another NHS organisation:


-90% of staff playing sport said it improved their working relationships


-Sickness absence reduced from 4.09% to 3.78%


There is a legacy and it's created and being delivered by NHS staff.


Hear more from Mike Farrar at the Summit, 22nd November, London. Book your place now.


 

Friday, 11 February 2011

Prescription Fitness

What has the storm over the Government’s proposed NHS reforms got to do with the fitness industry?

There are some serious discussions to be had about what the Coalition wants to do to the NHS but for us in the fitness industry, the proposals provide a massive opportunity.

In a couple of years time GP’s will hold the purse strings. They will decide where to send patients and where to spend the money.

What is the single most urgent and effective thing that people need to do to improve their health and reduce the risk of disease? We all know the answer is ‘exercise’. What is more 85% of the population visit their GP at least once a year and increasingly GP’s are going to be pressurised to get them to exercise. And there is our opportunity.

The fitness sector has what the population needs in order to be healthy. GPs are going to have to recommend exercise more and more to get people fit. And if that needs money, the GPs will have it in their pot.

There’s never been a more important time to get to know our local doctors and persuade them of the benefits we, as an industry, can bring to people; to keep them well, to keep them out of hospital and if they do get ill, to help them recover more quickly. It is a win win situation!

Dr John Searle (OBE), FIA Chief Medical Officer

Monday, 4 October 2010

It’s all happening in Manchester

Stephanie Creighton, Public Affairs and Policy Officer at The Fitness Industry Association looks back on the Labour Party Conference.

This week, was a busy week for Manchester; hosting Chelsea FC at Eastlands at the weekend,  Jonny Depp and Samuel L Jackson in the city filming, and hosting the Labour party conference is no mean feat in one week. Luckily I only found out that Jonny and Samuel were in town as I left, otherwise I may not have spent as much time at the conference!

An important conference for the party, Labour were once again reunited to lick their wounds after their defeat at the May general election and announce who they had elected to be their new leader. Arriving at conference on the Sunday, the winner had already been declared. ‘Red Ed’, as he had become known to some during the campaign, had been victorious, controversially for some as the previous forerunner in the contest, his brother David had been defeated. Ed Miliband’s narrow victory was discussed at length by party members throughout the conference and there were definitely divisions in opinions amongst party members.

Conference for me began with an intimate roundtable event with the shadow health team debating the future of healthcare in the UK. The current shadow team were keen to develop policies and listen to health stakeholder groups advice on their own areas of expertise. The main focus of discussion was around the plans for GP Commissioning Boards, which has been proposed by the current coalition government. Opinions on the proposals were varied and it is clear that more detail is required to understand how this will work effectively in practice. Unfortunately, public health was only discussed briefly. The white paper indicates that a public health service will be developed by the new government, perhaps implying that this would run separately from the NHS and the structures already in place. I was delighted when it was Steve Field, Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners who raised this, declaring that it was crucial that public health was a priority for GPs and other members of the medical profession. It was great to hear that the GPs were singing from the FIA hymn sheet!

On Monday, I went to the London 2012 fringe with Tessa Jowell, Shadow Minister for the Olympics. Questioned about the sporting and health legacy, Ms Jowell discussed the legacy at length but as always with esteemed politicians failed to address the crux of the question. No actions that have been taken have resulted in a significant increase in physical activity and sporting participation. I pondered on her long response, criticising the loss of free swimming and praising the work of the Youth Sports Trust in increasing participation levels in school sport. I left, pleased that I had sparked a long response but disappointed in the lack of ideas and encouragement.

The most engaged labour MP, pioneering public health, surprisingly was Hazel Blears. Speaking at a DEMOs and Dr Foster Intelligence fringe, she repeatedly affirmed her belief that tackling public health issues were crucial for the health service and were crucial to health reforms. The dedication to public health given at that fringe lifted my spirits.

On Tuesday morning, I could hardly believe my eyes. As I sat with Fred Tuok in the Midland hotel following our meetings with the Chartered Society of Physiotherapists and Ben Bradshaw MP, I saw three people drinking Champagne. I had to check where I was. Yes this was the labour party conference. Yes it was pre 12pm. My mind boggled.

The leaders speech on Tuesday was the focus of the conference. I ended up watching it in the exhibition hall where I could hear the live version booming out from the hall, and the screened version which was on a 5 second delay. I knew when the clapping and cheering was coming. Ed’s first speech clearly marked that this was the new generation of the labour party. Only time will tell whether this is the new generation, a new era or a new version of the same.

That evening, as rumours flew around about David Miliband’s future in the party, I was told on good authority that his decision had been made and he had chosen to stand down from frontline politics. His decision was confirmed on Wednesday evening - a great loss to the frontline politics of the labour party.

What a conference! And one which will never be discussed without mentioning the Miliband name. A new generation, a new start, a new kind of politics? This story has only just begun. Leaving Manchester, minus the conference cold I arrived with, I reflect on the two conferences I have just been to which were probably more similar than they appeared on the surface. Both leaders’ were aiming to unite the party members, and show what they could achieve as a collective movement.

Looking forward to next week in Birmingham, I can’t help but feel the conservatives will put on an entirely different show altogether…

Wednesday, 29 September 2010

A Look Back on the Lim Dem Party Conference

Stephanie Creighton, Public Affairs and Policy Officer at The Fitness Industry Association looks back on the Lib Dem Party Conference.

On the first leg of my political relay I spent four days in Liverpool with the Liberal Democrats. This was a historic conference, the first in 65 years when the Liberal Democrats have formed part of the government. But of course it is not only a Liberal Democrat government but a coalition in partnership with the Conservatives, some of whom made history by coming to Liverpool and addressing the Liberal Party faithful.

Before this landmark conference we waited with baited breath in anticipation of the political fireworks which could explode before our eyes. Media speculation was rife about potential splits in the party and that conference would be the time for the left of the party to voice any anger they had over the coalition and its plans. But no such luck! Liverpool’s conference came and went with relatively little drama. Only a couple of motions and votes took a different line to the official coalition government position but who expected the Liberal party to vote in favour of the ‘coalition’s’ free schools policy?

The man of the moment, the Rt Hon Nick Clegg MP, roused the crowd on the third day of conference with his leaders speech. ‘Stick with us’ was his message to the party, take the opportunity to change politics and make history. A firm speech was delivered which was gratefully received by the conference floor although this led me to consider what he could have said which would have not resulted in a standing ovation?? A confession that he was secretly a Tory who had infiltrated the party years ago and had waited for this day to come? Disappointed this hadn’t happened, I left the hall to reflect on his words.

Luckily I had been sent the speech so I didn’t have to remember much but lo and behold! There was no mention of public health and sport in his address. How could this be? With a public health white paper due to be published in December, the increasing burden on the NHS due to the physical inactivity epidemic, and the Olympic and Paralympic Games being hosted in Great Britain in 2012, surely this should have been high on the liberal democrat political agenda?

But fear not! One Lib Dem Minister covered it. Speaking at a fringe event put on by the FIA in partnership with MEND, WSFF and PSNC, the Paul Burstow MP outlined his party’s commitment to tackling the public health crisis. Referring to a psycho-social-physiological approach to public health, he said that the government had no choice but to tackle the growing number of diseases which were becoming a burden on the tax payer. Announcing that the government would be prepared to use regulatory intervention to tackle public health issues, Mr Burstow highlighted government plans to work in partnership with the private sector to combat these issues with a shared responsibility.

Earlier in the week at the London 2012 fringe event, Don Foster, Chair of the Lib Dem backbench committee voiced his support for the need of a physical activity and sporting legacy from the games. The audience, which was full of local councillors, were supportive and eager to get involved and capitalise on the power of the games in their local areas.

Although we are still waiting for policy specifics, and tangible ways in which industries and local authorities can get involved and deliver, it is clear this is a party (and a part of the government) that is serious about these ambitions.

And so the journey conditions.  Next, I will be reporting in on a new labour leader stepping into the limelight and rallying the party for the very first time and a very busy conservative conference who are still basking in their new government position.

Stephanie Creighton
Public Affairs and Policy Officer