The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

GP: ‘I can’t prescribe exercise’

Health: Doctor says layouts of towns and cities favour cars over pedestrian­s and bicycles

- BY TOM PETERKIN POLITICAL EDITOR

An Inverness GP will this week call on politician­s to make radical plans to overhaul towns and cities, making them more cycling and walking friendly.

Katie Walter, of the Cairn Medical Practice, will give evidence to an MSPs’ inquiry into doctors prescribin­g activity and sport as a means of tackling physical and mental illness.

Dr Walter, who is involved in several projects looking at how exercise improves health, believes Scotland is in a position to develop a “groundbrea­king” approach to physical activity.

Her proposals have been outlined in a document she has submitted ahead of her appearance in front of the Holyrood Health Committee.

In her submission, she calls for new laws to ensure that the layouts of towns and cities encourage cycling and walking, arguing they currently favour motorists.

Dr Walter also asks the committee to commission a review on the impact of prescribin­g exercise, and how effective it is when it comes to encouragin­g people to take up sustained physical activity.

She also flags up the “barriers” which can prevent people from exercising, including the way towns and cities have evolved.

“Probably the biggest barrier is the environmen­t that we live in, that is now so conducive to driving and so off-putting for cycling,” Dr Walter writes.

“Cities and towns… have now most of their services and supermarke­ts on the outsides, rather than near where people live, which is a barrier to walking.

“This is a public health issue that needs political will to reclaim from local councils and their planning department... It is time to entrench that in the laws of how we build our infrastruc­ture.

“I cannot recommend someone to cycle if the streets or roads near them are not safe for that.”

Dr Walter argues the benefits of exercise makes it an issue for all health profession­als and likens it to public health initiative­s to stop smoking.

She also warns that the “short-term” nature of funding for local exercise projects is another difficulty doctors face when trying to encourage patients to take more exercise.

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said it supported “all efforts” to make Scots more active.

The spokeswoma­n said: “In 2018 we published our Active Scotland Delivery Plan which aims to cut physical inactivity in adults and teenagers by 15% by 2030.”

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 ??  ?? RADICAL: Dr Walter has submitted a proposal asking politician­s to consider exercise a public health concern
RADICAL: Dr Walter has submitted a proposal asking politician­s to consider exercise a public health concern

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