Get HCM digital magazine and ezines FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs   News   Features   Products   Magazine      Advertise  
NEWS
No wealth without health, says UK Active chief Huw Edwards
POSTED 23 Jan 2024 . BY Kath Hudson
Wealth generation depends on nations having healthy populations Credit: Shutterstock/Nebojsa Tatomirov

Credit: UK Active
Economic growth will be a dominant political issue this year
– Huw Edwards, CEO, UK Active
UK Active CEO, Huw Edwards, says ill health is holding back the economy – it cost the UK economy £150 billion in 2023
Getting inactive workers to be active could be worth up to £17bn to the UK economy
Obesity, musculoskeletal and mental health conditions are the biggest causes of workplace absenteeism
How we address this issue must now move from the fringes to the centre of the debate about our country’s future, said Edwards
As the UK's political parties set their sights on the general election in 2024, UK Active CEO, Huw Edwards, says there can be no economic growth without better health in the population.

“Economic growth will be a dominant political issue this year," he said. "The issue of ill health among working-age people needs to be a national priority for the leaders of both political parties as they seek to form the next government.

“This is an unavoidable issue which either Prime Minister Sunak or Prime Minister Starmer must begin to address in 2024. We can no longer afford to accommodate our poor national health and how we address it must now move from the fringes to the centre of the debate about our country’s future,” said Edwards. "They need to undersand there will be no wealth without health."

Poor health among working-age people is becoming an increasing concern for policymakers. Last year, the Times Health Commission enaged research outfit Oxera to report on ill health among working-age people.

The study found it cost the UK economy £150bn a year in 2023 – equivalent to 7 per cent of GDP – representing an increase of 60 per cent in the past six years.

Almost one in five people aged between 16 and 64 reports having a work-limiting health issue, with a record 2.6 million now out of work due to long-term sickness. These issues also are growing in prevalence amongst 18- to 24-year-olds, with the number leaving full-time work due to sickness doubling in the last decade.

However, new Consumer Engagement Polling from ukactive and Savanta shows people are increasingly joining gyms to manage their health, as opposed to get fit, lose weight or look good. The survey showed motivations for taking out memberships vary between managing a health condition (55 per cent), improving mental health and wellbeing (78 per cent), improving confidence (75 per cent), and preventing illness and injuries.

“These areas of motivation directly match the headline public health issues we face as a nation,” says Edwards. “The green shoots of how we seek to improve our poor health lie in these instinctive motivations [to join a health club]. The government should harness this, working in partnership with the sport and physical activity sector, to help millions more people achieve their health goals.”

Edwards believes the health and fitness sector has never been fully recognised by governments and its potential has not been realised, saying: “A recent Deloitte report indicated that the potential economic benefit, in healthcare savings and increased productivity, of getting inactive workers to be active is worth up to £17bn to the UK.”

He calls for better integration of the sector with the NHS, addressing the long-term provision of swimming pools and leisure facilities, and reforming the tax and regulatory system that suppresses the expansion ambitions of the private sector.

Additionally, employers should be able to offer staff health club memberships, or home fitness equipment as a perk and then claim the costs against tax. There should be an overhaul of VAT to incentivise gym membership – as Ireland has done – and a reform of business rates to encourage more gyms, pools and fitness facilities to open.

“The prize is substantial, with savings of up to £1bn in healthcare spending alongside the generation of an additional £3.6bn per annum in GDP uplift through increased productivity,” says Edwards.


MORE NEWS
PILAT3S to debut in ClubSportive, Amsterdam
Urban Gym Group will launch PILAT3S at ClubSportive in Amsterdam next month, to create a boutique-in-gym experience.
Cedric Bryant is the new CEO at The American Council on Exercise
Dr Cedric Bryant takes up the new position on 1 July, following on from Scott Goudeseune who has been ACE CEO for more than 15 years, overseeing significant growth.
UK Active and Savanta launch quarterly consumer engagement insight
Improving physical strength and fitness, mental health and confidence are the main reasons for joining a health club, while cost, time and motivation are the main reasons for leaving.
Snap Fitness' holding company – Lift Brands – is up for sale
Speaking to HCM, global CEO of Lift Brands, Ty Menzies, has confirmed that the company –  owner of Snap Fitness and Fitness On Demand – is up for sale.
+ More news   
LATEST JOBS
Fitness Instructor
University of Brighton
Salary: £23,144 to £25,138pa
Job location: Brighton, East Sussex , United Kingdom
Fitness Motivator and Personal Trainer
Everyone Active
Salary:
Job location: Bristol
Exercise Referral Co-ordinator
Everyone Active
Salary: £Excellent salary + benefits
Job location: Horfield, Bristol , United Kingdom
+ More jobs  

FEATURED SUPPLIERS

W3Fit EMEA’s innovative programme sets sail for Sardinia, Italy
Following a hugely successful event last year in Split, Croatia, W3Fit EMEA, is heading to the Chia Laguna resort in Sardinia from 8-11 October. [more...]

Group exercise complaints now a thing of the past for Reynolds Group
Complaints about group exercise have become a thing of the past for the Reynolds Group thanks to its partnership with CoverMe, a digital platform that simplifies group exercise and PT management for clubs and instructors. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
Keiser UK LTD

For more than four decades, Keiser has influenced the training of athletes, fitness enthusiasts an [more...]
IndigoFitness

We Create Training Spaces! We've been designing and delivering high quality training spaces for alm [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

18-22 May 2024

Eco Resort Network

The Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Mauritius
23-24 May 2024

European Health Prevention Day

Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
+ More diary  
 
ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
 
HCM
LEISURE OPPORTUNITIES
HEALTH CLUB HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024
Get HCM digital magazine and ezines FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs    News   Products   Magazine
NEWS
No wealth without health, says UK Active chief Huw Edwards
POSTED 23 Jan 2024 . BY Kath Hudson
Wealth generation depends on nations having healthy populations Credit: Shutterstock/Nebojsa Tatomirov
Credit: UK Active
Economic growth will be a dominant political issue this year
– Huw Edwards, CEO, UK Active
UK Active CEO, Huw Edwards, says ill health is holding back the economy – it cost the UK economy £150 billion in 2023
Getting inactive workers to be active could be worth up to £17bn to the UK economy
Obesity, musculoskeletal and mental health conditions are the biggest causes of workplace absenteeism
How we address this issue must now move from the fringes to the centre of the debate about our country’s future, said Edwards
As the UK's political parties set their sights on the general election in 2024, UK Active CEO, Huw Edwards, says there can be no economic growth without better health in the population.

“Economic growth will be a dominant political issue this year," he said. "The issue of ill health among working-age people needs to be a national priority for the leaders of both political parties as they seek to form the next government.

“This is an unavoidable issue which either Prime Minister Sunak or Prime Minister Starmer must begin to address in 2024. We can no longer afford to accommodate our poor national health and how we address it must now move from the fringes to the centre of the debate about our country’s future,” said Edwards. "They need to undersand there will be no wealth without health."

Poor health among working-age people is becoming an increasing concern for policymakers. Last year, the Times Health Commission enaged research outfit Oxera to report on ill health among working-age people.

The study found it cost the UK economy £150bn a year in 2023 – equivalent to 7 per cent of GDP – representing an increase of 60 per cent in the past six years.

Almost one in five people aged between 16 and 64 reports having a work-limiting health issue, with a record 2.6 million now out of work due to long-term sickness. These issues also are growing in prevalence amongst 18- to 24-year-olds, with the number leaving full-time work due to sickness doubling in the last decade.

However, new Consumer Engagement Polling from ukactive and Savanta shows people are increasingly joining gyms to manage their health, as opposed to get fit, lose weight or look good. The survey showed motivations for taking out memberships vary between managing a health condition (55 per cent), improving mental health and wellbeing (78 per cent), improving confidence (75 per cent), and preventing illness and injuries.

“These areas of motivation directly match the headline public health issues we face as a nation,” says Edwards. “The green shoots of how we seek to improve our poor health lie in these instinctive motivations [to join a health club]. The government should harness this, working in partnership with the sport and physical activity sector, to help millions more people achieve their health goals.”

Edwards believes the health and fitness sector has never been fully recognised by governments and its potential has not been realised, saying: “A recent Deloitte report indicated that the potential economic benefit, in healthcare savings and increased productivity, of getting inactive workers to be active is worth up to £17bn to the UK.”

He calls for better integration of the sector with the NHS, addressing the long-term provision of swimming pools and leisure facilities, and reforming the tax and regulatory system that suppresses the expansion ambitions of the private sector.

Additionally, employers should be able to offer staff health club memberships, or home fitness equipment as a perk and then claim the costs against tax. There should be an overhaul of VAT to incentivise gym membership – as Ireland has done – and a reform of business rates to encourage more gyms, pools and fitness facilities to open.

“The prize is substantial, with savings of up to £1bn in healthcare spending alongside the generation of an additional £3.6bn per annum in GDP uplift through increased productivity,” says Edwards.


MORE NEWS
PILAT3S to debut in ClubSportive, Amsterdam
Urban Gym Group will launch PILAT3S at ClubSportive in Amsterdam next month, to create a boutique-in-gym experience.
Cedric Bryant is the new CEO at The American Council on Exercise
Dr Cedric Bryant takes up the new position on 1 July, following on from Scott Goudeseune who has been ACE CEO for more than 15 years, overseeing significant growth.
UK Active and Savanta launch quarterly consumer engagement insight
Improving physical strength and fitness, mental health and confidence are the main reasons for joining a health club, while cost, time and motivation are the main reasons for leaving.
Snap Fitness' holding company – Lift Brands – is up for sale
Speaking to HCM, global CEO of Lift Brands, Ty Menzies, has confirmed that the company –  owner of Snap Fitness and Fitness On Demand – is up for sale.
Planet Fitness increases price of basic membership for first time in over 20 years
Planet Fitness has announced the repurchase of 314,000 shares at a rate of US$20 million. The Class A common stocks were repurchased and retired, using cash.
Xponential dumps Geisler as company faces investigation by US Attorney’s Office
Xponential Fitness today indefinitely suspended founder and CEO, Anthony Geisler, saying it had been notified on 7 May that the company is facing a legal challenge by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California.
+ More news   
 
FEATURED SUPPLIERS

W3Fit EMEA’s innovative programme sets sail for Sardinia, Italy
Following a hugely successful event last year in Split, Croatia, W3Fit EMEA, is heading to the Chia Laguna resort in Sardinia from 8-11 October. [more...]

Group exercise complaints now a thing of the past for Reynolds Group
Complaints about group exercise have become a thing of the past for the Reynolds Group thanks to its partnership with CoverMe, a digital platform that simplifies group exercise and PT management for clubs and instructors. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers  
COMPANY PROFILES
Keiser UK LTD

For more than four decades, Keiser has influenced the training of athletes, fitness enthusiasts an [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  

DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

18-22 May 2024

Eco Resort Network

The Ravenala Attitude Hotel, Mauritius
23-24 May 2024

European Health Prevention Day

Large Hall of the Chamber of Commerce (Erbprinzenpalais), Wiesbaden, Germany
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

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