The Daily Telegraph

NHS chiefs unveil plan for spas, facials and Zumba at hospitals

- By Laura Donnelly Health Editor

HOSPITALS should build spas and offer facials and Zumba classes to encourage healthy lifestyles, say NHS chiefs.

Officials have drawn up plans for “health campuses” where swimming classes, beauty treatments and aerobics would be on offer to encourage people to take more care of themselves – instead of treating healthcare as a “sickness service.”

But critics said the ideas were a “farcical” waste of money at a time when the NHS is under severe financial pressure.

Duncan Selbie, the chief executive of Public Health England, said the plans were “the big step forward” for health service, calling on all areas to follow suit. “I think this is exactly what we should be doing. The NHS is the most powerful brand that we have got, but the focus has always been on illness not health,” he said.

“Encouragin­g people to make changes to their lifestyles is by far the most sustainabl­e way of achieving change and saving money in the long run.”

The proposals are part of

schemes being drawn up by 10 “healthy towns” across the NHS, with other areas planning shopping discounts to reward physical activity, as well as free bikes to encourage it.

Ministers are understood to be in talks about an expansion of health campuses across the rest of the country.

Plans drawn up by the NHS in Warrington would see a “wellness centre” alongside traditiona­l health services. Mel Pickup, chief executive of Warrington and Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said she hoped the proposals could be realised within five years.

“It could be about having a facial in the spa, or going to a Zumba class alongside MRI scans and hip replacemen­ts. It is redefining what a hospital does; not just being a sickness service but encouragin­g better lifestyles,” she said.

“It is about creating a wellness centre within a medical plaza where you can see a GP – a shared facility for acute care and for the community to socialise, to exercise and to swim,” she said.

Authoritie­s have already replaced the local leisure centre with a health “hub”, bringing together a swimming pool, dance studios and skateboard park with three GP surgeries and a café. In Sandwell, West Midlands, a “lifestyle centre” has been built, with funding from the NHS and local authority, offering a climbing wall, hydrothera­py pool, sensory garden, and dance studio.

Mr Selbie said the NHS was “throwing its weight” behind the plans for health campuses and wanted to see their widespread adoption. “Three years ago we said we’ve got to approach things quite differentl­y – to make a positive difference. This is the smartest move we could make,” he continued.

Expenditur­e could be justified because getting people active and reducing anxiety could save the NHS billions in the long-run, he said.

But the Institute of Economic Affairs said the ideas were ludicrous. Mark Littlewood, director general, said: “To think that NHS chiefs, in all seriousnes­s, are suggesting that the NHS should be providing facials to coax grown adults to lead healthy lifestyles is farcical.

“How facials can legitimate­ly be supplied at the expense of the taxpayer is an insult to those who have been denied vital treatments by the NHS for illnesses such as cancer.”

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