Minimum activity guidelines are offputting to many; some even use them as an excuse: ‘I can’t achieve that, I might as well do nothing’. So how can we change the national psyche and get people moving?
By Kath Hudson | Published in Health Club Management 2014 issue 9
Research shows that people who use the Tube actually boost their walking activity Credit: photo: shutterstock.com/Pavel L Photo & Video
According to Dr Mike Loosemore – head of exercise medicine at UCL’s Institute of Sport Exercise and Health, and founder of Active Movement – most people are so far away from the government’s activity guidelines that they give up before they even start.
However, with physical inactivity now the fourth biggest killer, we can’t afford to let people give up on themselves. So what can the fitness sector do to help change the behaviour of the public at large?
Loosemore thinks the bar should be set very low: simply encouraging people to stand up, instead of sitting down, as a good starting point. He says one of the main problems we’re facing is that physical activity has been engineered out of our lives: the Housewife Survey in the US found that women with children under the age of five are doing 14 hours less exercise a week than 50 years ago, with the same calorie consumption.
So should part of operators’ offering involve tutoring people about how to bring activity back into their everyday lives? For example, clubs could encourage – and indeed help plan – a public transport commute: research from Transport for London has shown that people are more likely to hit 150 minutes’ activity a week if they use the underground. For those who have to drive a car, maybe they could be encouraged to park slightly further from their destination and run or walk the last bit? Apparently Cameron Diaz always runs from place to place on-set to boost her activity levels, so what exercises could we give people to do at their desks, or while waiting for the kettle to boil?
Do we need to create a new form of membership for people who are not yet ready for the health club experience, coaching them to change their eating habits and start to get active in a less intimidating environment? This might not create new members instantly, but it can still drive revenue and may provide future members.
Going forward, changing behaviour is definitely going to become increasingly important, so how should operators go about it? We ask the experts....
Dr Mike LoosemoreFounderActive Movement
Dr Mike Loosemore
“The people who find the government’s physical activity guidelines intimidating view gyms in the same way: it’s just too far away from their reality to seem possible.
The health club industry has to understand that not everyone wants or is able to go to the gym to be physically active; operators need to find new ways to reach out to them. Fitness instructors should be trained in motivational interviewing and be able to advise people on how they could get more active. That may well not be at the gym at first.
Only 7 per cent of men and 3 per cent of women are fulfilling the public health guidelines. Thirty per cent are doing less than half, and half of those don’t do anything at all. Health club operators could help by spreading the word that it’s not just heavy or moderate activity that can improve health, but doing any type of activity. I ask people to start by just walking up one step when they’re on an escalator. Taking this achievable approach has led to some outstanding results.
People need to have a reason to change their behaviour. About 20 per cent will manage to change if they want to, and this goes up to 60 per cent if they have support. A monetary stake can work and is becoming a popular tool in the US.”
Dr Justin VarneyConsultant Public Health Medicine, Health and WellbeingPHE
Dr Justin Varney
“Public Health England is publishing a new national framework to move things forward on an industrial scale. The aim is to get everyone active, but we’re especially focusing on the 29 per cent who do less than 30 minutes’ activity a week. There’s a massive role here for the sport and leisure industry to drill down to those audiences they don’t reach, find out the barriers and design programmes that will appeal. For example, we’ve seen great results from women-only swimming sessions in areas with large Muslim communities.
To achieve our aim, we need the health and fitness industry to collaborate and share good practice regarding what works. There is so much replication at the moment, with lots of people reinventing the wheel. I want everyone to rebrand the same wheel.
There’s only so much you can do for market generation from a fixed standpoint, so operators are going to need to take activity to people through outreach work. A great example of this is Birmingham Leisure’s Gym Without Walls programme, which offers activities in parks. To change behaviour, we need to make it easier for people to become active: if they don’t come to clubs, we need to take activities closer to them.”
Dave StalkerCEOukactive
Dave Stalker
“The big message has to be about working together for the greater good: operators should not be afraid to speak out about the best practice they have achieved and to introduce other operators to their ideas. We must work together.
Operators should develop and deliver tailored programmes that target inactive individuals who are need of behavioural change. What our Turning the Tide of Inactivity report established was that there’s a massive population who are not in need of a clinical intervention, but who desire a programme that acknowledges both their willingness and also their barriers to change, and provides counselling support to change. In a pilot study conducted by ukactive, a simple 12-week programme of such counselling generated significant improvements in health outcomes for sedentary individuals.
There are several key rules to follow and adopt regarding behaviour change. Firstly, take a patient-centred approach when it comes to identifying the benefits of physical activity and guide them through key behaviour change stages. Establish a goal with them while also identifying local opportunities to be active. Reward progress against goals and constantly communicate the programme to them to get their feedback.”
Rob BarkerPresidentPrecor
Rob Barker
“To change behaviour, the industry first needs to team up: it’s a fragmented sector and we have to share information among suppliers and operators.
Clubs need to encourage access and trial usage, and from that springboard help people make attending the club a base habit. Once they get someone through the doors, they need to deliver the sort of experience that makes people want to keep coming back. In order to do this, operators have to increase the personalisation of the experience; we can’t use a catch-all approach as there are almost as many different motivators to join health clubs as there are individuals. Clubs need to secure a deeper understanding of members, finding out early on what they want to achieve. These findings should then be acted on in a personalised way, both inside and outside of the club, including the intelligent use of technology.
Clubs should also be encouraging people to bring more incidental activity back into their lives – such as a lunchtime walk – using smartphones to keep track of members’ movements. There need to be micro rewards every time members do an activity, so they get daily appreciation for their efforts.
Finally, members need to be in charge when their exercise plan is being put together: let them choose their activity.”
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