Yorkshire Post

Call to prescribe more exercise to combat obesity

- HARRIET SUTTON MEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

MORE PEOPLE who are obese and inactive should be prescribed exercise classes at local leisure centres, according to councils.

New analysis from the District Councils’ Network (DCN), which commission­ed experts at the University of East Anglia, suggests nearly a third of people currently do less than 30 minutes of physical activity per week.

The report found that if GPs prescribed local leisure services to one million inactive people over the next decade this could avoid thousands of cases of disease, save the NHS more than £300m and extend people’s lives by about 3.7 years.

The DCN is calling on the Government to invest in local sport and leisure services, which it argues already have close community links and can work with groups such as charities to focus on hard-to-reach groups. It comes as some councilope­rated gyms, swimming pools and sports halls continue to face significan­t financial challenges to stay open in the wake of the pandemic.

According to the DCN, councils are the biggest provider of leisure and fitness services in the country, owning 2,727 leisure centres, 33 per cent of all swimming pools and 31

per cent of the grass pitches in England.

Angie Dale, healthy communitie­s spokeswoma­n for the DCN, said: “As we emerge from the pandemic, it is vital we embrace this as an opportunit­y to get the nation fit and healthy, and to continue protecting and supporting our NHS by preventing illness and disease where we can.

“Our new report shows conclusive­ly that local leisure centres can play a vital role in keeping people fit, and prescribin­g these services to people can increase life expectancy by up to four years.

“By providing long-term investment and integratin­g our councils’ excellent leisure and wellbeing services into health systems, we can increase life expectancy and tackle growing health inequaliti­es. This is levelling up in action. Most of the wider determinan­ts of public health are not dictated by the NHS or local health bodies, but by the factors of everyday life that districtle­vel services help to shape.”

It comes after a study earlier this month found that only a minority of obese people were referred by GPs to clubs like Slimming World between 2007 and 2020.

Just three per cent of adults with a recording of being overweight or obese in primary care in England have been referred to weight management programmes by their GP.

In 2014, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) issued updated guidance saying people with a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or more could benefit from a GP referral to weight-loss programmes. It added that “where there is capacity”, those who are overweight (with a BMI of 25 or more, or lower in black and minority ethnic groups) should not have their access restricted.

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