bbspa_Group
 bbspa_Group
 bbspa_Group
 
EMPLOYERS: POST A JOB
Free ezines & magazines
News Video Training Products Magazines Spa Business spa-kit Handbook What's on Advertise Subscribe
Catalogue gallery
More catalogues
Diary dates
Powered by leisurediary.com
09-11 Jun 2026
Savutuvan Apaja, Haapaniemi, Finland
09-12 Jun 2026
Hotel Cascais Miragem Health & Spa, Portugal
21-23 Jun 2026
Midlands (Venue TBA), Liphook, United Kingdom
22-22 Jun 2026
Worldwide,
03-05 Jul 2026
Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
19-21 Jul 2026
The Global Ambassador , Phoenix, United States
22-25 Jul 2026
The Global Ambassador , Phoenix, United States
23-26 Aug 2026
The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
Templespa Ltd
Company Profile
Fenix Group srl
Fenix Group, founded by Gianluca Cavalletti in Italy, launched Endospheres to revolutionise [more]
 
MORE PROFILES
Featured Supplier
Introducing Glass Act by Templespa
Introducing Glass Act, your new go-to eye serum for brighter, smoother, beautifully awakened eyes. ... more
Latest news
Rosewood Le Guanahani St Barth offers ocean-themed yoga for #GlobalWellnessDay #JoyMagenta
Rosewood Le Guanahani St Barth offers ocean-themed yoga for Global Wellness Day
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The @Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for #GlobalWellnessDay #JoyMagenta
Rainforest immersion and mindfulness are on offer at The Ritz-Carlton, Langkawi, for Global Wellness Day
Solmar Hotels and Resorts offers Temazcal ceremony for #GlobalWellnessDay2026 #JoyMagenta @SolmarResorts #spa
Solmar Hotels and Resorts offers Temazcal ceremony for Global Wellness Day
Belgin Aksoy prepares to mark 15 years of #GlobalWellnessDay on Saturday 13 June #JoyMagenta #spa #wellness
Belgin Aksoy prepares to mark 15 years of Global Wellness Day on Saturday 13 June
Myrtha Wellness
Product news
Voya launches Resurge Hair and Scalp Elixir and spa treatments
Voya launches Resurge Hair and Scalp Elixir and spa treatments
Esse Skincare upgrades Probiotic Serum with fourth live probiotic species
Esse Skincare upgrades Probiotic Serum with fourth live probiotic species
Sweet Bee Organics enters spa market at The Ned London with magnesium-infused treatment
Sweet Bee Organics enters spa market at The Ned London with magnesium-infused treatment
Templespa releases brightening Glass Act eye serum
Templespa releases brightening Glass Act eye serum
OSKIA unveils Midnight Eye Q cream for nocturnal repair
OSKIA unveils Midnight Eye Q cream for nocturnal repair
Landsberg First Class Aesthetic launches Thermoceutical’s EXO Regentron Eyecontour
Landsberg First Class Aesthetic launches Thermoceutical’s EXO Regentron Eyecontour
Directory

 
JOBS
NEWS
VIDEO
TRAINING
PRODUCTS
MAGAZINE
 
SPA BUSINESS
SPA-KIT.NET
SPA BUSINESS HANDBOOK
SUBSCRIBE
ADVERTISE
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026



 bbspa_Group
 bbspa_Group
 bbspa_Group
 bbspa_Group
News   Products   Magazine
Letters
Write to reply

Do you have a strong opinion or disagree with somebody else’s views on the industry? If so, we’d love to hear from you – email: [email protected]



An opportunity to put mental health evidence into practice

 

Patrick Murphy
 
Patrick Murphy Development Services Manager South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture

I was interested to read your recent piece on how health clubs can get involved in mental health (‘Emotional Wellbeing’, HCM Feb 17, p52). South Lanarkshire Leisure and Culture has not only recognised the percentage of residents affected by mental health issues, but has made a conscious effort to embed solutions into our services.

This has not been a specific marketing tool but more a shift in organisational focus, which is very much welcomed by the recently formed Health and Social Care Partnership.

From an operational point of view, the key driver has been to engage GPs to proactively prescribe physical activity while encouraging patients to ‘invest in their health’. However, it has taken time to build partnerships with the NHS and convince GPs that services and programmes are both professional and have positive outcomes.

SLL&C has also noticed that not every mental health referral from a GP results in physical activity prescription. Many referrals instead focus on weight management, walking or even cultural pursuits like reading or pottery. We do, however, have some specific programmes that are a perfect fit for people suffering from low mood, stress or anxiety like the Weigh To Go: New Mum, Active Mornings or Healthy Families programmes.

Unfortunately, I feel that both the general public and our health partners have a long way to go in discussing the stigma that surrounds mental health issues. I strongly feel there is a true opportunity to get behind the evidence that simple physical activity has an almost immediate benefit to an individual. We need to make that very clear when an individual seeks advice.


“Physical activity has an almost immediate benefit to an individual. We need to make this clear when they seek advice”

 


shutterstock.com

Exercise has been proven to alleviate mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety

By leaving fitness out of T Levels, the government is undermining its own strategy

 

Rob May
 
Rob May Director YMCA Awards

In his first budget announcement, the Chancellor pledged £500m to new ‘T Levels’, a technical alternative to A Levels. In doing so, the education routes for more than half of UK occupations have been left out in the cold.

The definition of what constitutes a ‘technical’ occupation has never been properly explained. The 15 technical routes earmarked for investment were decided by a five-member panel and were included in the government’s new Post-16 Skills Plan, without consultation, by the then Skills Minister Nick Boles.

Given previous pledges to restore the nation’s health, it came as a great surprise when fitness was left out for not being ‘technical enough’. This could drastically undermine the government’s own ambition to reduce strain on the NHS by creating a more active nation.

The £4.4bn fitness sector isn’t just about leisure time. It needs a rich supply of highly technical, trained professionals who can work with the rising number of patients referred by GPs, as well as hard-to-reach populations at grassroots level.

The investment in T Levels may result in training providers gravitating towards funding and cancelling courses in neglected sectors. This will de-professionalise the sector and create future problems.

We need a properly funded skills strategy, aligned to the economic and health needs of the country. If the government is serious about improving the UK’s health, it needs to invest in its future workforce now.


“If the government is serious about improving the UK’s health, it needs to invest in its future workforce now”

 


shutterstock

We need a rich supply of highly trained professionals

Trampoline parks are not as risky as media reports make out

 

Gill Twell
 
Gill Twell Head of Group Development and Quest Operations Right Directions

I was disappointed to read The Sun’s recent article ‘Flipping Dangerous’, which stated that more than 35 people are taken to A&E every day with trampoline-related injuries.

With over 34 per cent of year six children (aged 10–11) currently overweight or obese in the UK, it’s important to find new and innovative ways to get them active. Trampoline parks have cornered this niche, by being so much fun, children don’t even see it as exercise.

It’s estimated that thousands of people visit trampoline parks every week; while injuries do occur, they are few compared to the number of people using the parks, and considerably fewer than in sports such as rugby and football.

However, safety must be the number one concern, and that’s why the International Association of Trampoline Parks was behind the launch of the BSI Publicly Accessible Specification (PAS) 5000:2017 that came into effect in March. Alongside our Trampoline Park Safety Operating Plan – which sets out how a trampoline park should operate on a day-to-day basis – the PAS helps operators identify key risks at both design and operational stages, establishing an effective approach to managing, if not entirely removing, the risk of injury to customers and staff.


 


shutterstock.com

Trampolining is so much fun, children don’t realise it’s exercise

Government policies are squeezing young people
out of the industry

 

Gary Lockwood
 
Gary Lockwood CEO 24/7 Fitness

The last 10 years has seen significant downward pressure on the price of gym memberships, with many clubs charging less for a membership today than they did a decade ago. At the same time, the UK government has repeatedly refused to remove VAT from gym memberships and has consistently increased the minimum wage.

This, together with rapidly rising utility and facility costs, leaves many operators with shrinking profits and a dilemma. Raising prices in such a price-sensitive market is too bold a move for most, and with facility costs fixed, the only alternative is to employ fewer people.

Sites that previously employed 20 people are now running with two or three members of staff. Fitness instructors have been replaced with freelance personal trainers. No employment rights and no guaranteed income mean many PTs leave the industry for more secure work after only a short period. Meanwhile, most management positions are now rolled up into one multi-purpose manager with a tiny team and few upward progression prospects.

Fitness has traditionally been a haven for youngsters who perhaps struggled academically. With so few jobs now available in the industry, what does the future hold for them?


“No employment rights and no guaranteed income mean many PTs leave the industry for more secure work”

 


shutterstock

Many operators have reduced their staffing levels

Why hasn’t customer service in health clubs improved yet?

 

Mike Hill
 
Mike Hill Director Leisure-net Solutions

It was good to read three great articles in the January 17 issue of Health Club Management, all on different aspects of customer service: Paul Bedford’s ‘War on attrition’ (p48), Andy Bourne’s ‘A service culture’ (p74) and Chris Brindley’s ‘Creating fans not customers’ (p80).

However, if you look back at past issues of HCM you’ll see similar messages from similarly enlightened contributors over the last 10 years. So why haven’t things improved?

During the 14 years I’ve been running Leisure-net – with only a few exceptions – we haven’t seen a measurable improvement in customer experience, despite the time, money and effort put in and the advances in technology, data and insight. In fact, a lot of the ‘new thinking’ is made up of the same ideas many of us had over a decade ago, just wrapped up in new technology.

Increasingly, I believe the UK lacks a service culture. When visiting countries like the US, Chile and New Zealand, I see a different understanding of ‘service’ and pride in its delivery.

So can we change this culture? Perhaps, but it will take time, because we need to attract and recruit a different sort of person and spend time developing their communication and motivational skills. Then, finally, we must reward them as the professionals we expect them to be, to stop them leaving for jobs that pay significantly more and are more highly valued by society.


“During the past 14 years, we haven’t seen a measurable improvement in customer experience, despite the time, money and effort put in”

 


shutterstock.com

It’s important for staff to develop communication and motivation skills
LATEST NEWS
Healing sanctuary Tulah Clinical Wellness opens in Kerala
Tulah Clinical Wellness, a holistic wellness destination, has officially opened in the hills of northern Kerala, India.
Four Seasons Resort The Nam Hai creates Global Wellness Day programme rooted in nature
Four Seasons Resort The Nam Hai in Hoi An, Vietnam, has put together a Global Wellness Day (GWD) agenda with activations rooted in nature and shaped by four pillars of Joy – in alignment with the day’s theme #JoyMagenta.
Wellness care hospital opens in Vilnius with innovative spa and hospitality concept
Lithuanian care operator Addere Care has launched a new “wellness care hospital” in Vilnius.
Rainer Maelzer joins Therme Group as chief entertainment officer
Rainer Maelzer, an experiential entertainment innovator, has been appointed chief entertainment officer by Therme Group.
Global Wellness Summit announces 2026 theme: the science, art and soul of wellness
The Global Wellness Summit (GWS) will celebrate its 20th anniversary at the 2026 event in Phuket, Thailand, later this year with the theme: The Science, Art and Soul of Wellness.
All-inclusive eco-wellness development Auko to open near Vietnam’s Son Doong caves
Auko, an all-inclusive development, is opening in Phong Nha in Vietnam in Q3 2026, with a series of 30 tented eco-lodges and wellness hospitality operations by Lumina Wellbeing.
Therme Manchester reveals 90:90 strategy – 90 per cent of the UK population within a 90-minute drive of a Therme
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK. 
Four Seasons’ Naples Beach Club opens 2,800sq m Sanctuary spa inspired by indigenous Calusa people
Naples Beach Club, a Four Seasons Resort, has opened a 2,800sq m spa called The Sanctuary, with the design and concept inspired by the Native American people that populated Florida’s Southwest coast – the Calusa.
Swire Hotels’ Upper House unveils House of Healing wellness programme rollout
Swire Hotels’ luxury hospitality brand Upper House has revealed it will roll out its two-day House of Healing retreats at its three hotels in Hong Kong, Chengdu and Shanghai.
Guerlain to open up to five spas with handpicked partners a year, says Diane Davody
LVMH-owned beauty house Guerlain will launch up to five spas with partners a year as part of its plan to expand globally, according to the brand’s international spa and wellness director, Diane Davody.
More than half of consumers reject leading wellness resort brands
A new global study by Kevin Kelly and Peter Yesawich, called WELLSurvey 2.0, has revealed more than half of consumers in the UK, US and Germany would not choose numerous high- profile wellness resort brands for a future trip.
Longevity and hospitality in the spotlight at FIBO workshop
Wellness and hospitality thought leaders gathered recently for a workshop at Yasuragi, the Japanese spa and conference hotel near Stockholm.
+ More news   
 
COMPANY PROFILES
marocMaroc

Since its creation in 2007, MarocMaroc has invited the world to explore Moroccan beauty through a u [more...]
+ More profiles  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

09-11 Jun 2026

World Sauna Forum 2026

Savutuvan Apaja, Haapaniemi, Finland
09-12 Jun 2026

W3Spa EMEA

Hotel Cascais Miragem Health & Spa, Portugal
+ More diary  
 


CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS