1 / 25

Interesting Point to make

W alking your way to health and happiness. Interesting Point to make. Why don’t we expand on this point Maybe to a sublevel? And maybe another And say something to tie it up. Dr Mark Tully & Dr Ruth Hunter Centre of Excellence for Public Health Centre for Public Health

ozzy
Download Presentation

Interesting Point to make

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Walking your way to health and happiness Interesting Point to make • Why don’t we expand on this point • Maybe to a sublevel? • And maybe another • And say something to tie it up • Dr Mark Tully & Dr Ruth Hunter • Centre of Excellence for Public Health • Centre for Public Health • School of Medicine, Dentistry & Biomedical Science

  2. Benefits of Active Lifestyle

  3. Deathsattributed to 19 leadingfactors,by country incomelevel

  4. We do not get enough exercise 35% meet minimum criteria of 150 minutes of moderate intensity activity per week 30% are totally inactive Health Survey Northern Ireland (2010/11)

  5. Do not smoke Get 30 minutes of exercise or activity per day Maintain a BMI between 20 and 26 Eat a Mediterranean diet (5+ colorful fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and nuts per day, fish twice a week, and olive oil) Drink small to moderate amounts of alcohol (if they drink) Know and control blood pressure and cholesterol levels Unwind, be kind to yourself Do 7 things to reduce heart disease and cancer by 50% Overview

  6. How much activity should I aim for?

  7. Chief Medical Officer Recommends… Everyone should aim to accumulate 150 mins of moderate intensity activity per week • Pace faster than • normal, but not • breathless • Walking at • 3-4mph • 30 mins • per day

  8. Mass participation Safe No cost No training or special equipment Overcomes embarrassment Why Walk? Walking: the perfect exercise

  9. Is it possible to change?

  10. Exercise Groups: • 30 mins brisk walking 3 days per week • 30 minsbrisk walking 5 days per week • Control group: • Were asked to maintain their habitual lifestyle

  11. Results 3x week • 15% ↑ fitness • 1kg ↓ weight • 3cm ↓ waist • ↓ blood pressure • 2% reduction in 10yr risk CHD 5x week • 13% ↑ fitness • 3cm ↓ waist • ↓ blood pressure • 0.2% reduction in 10yr risk stroke

  12. Active “ingredients” • Self-monitoring • Goal setting • Social support

  13. Aids to Motivate & Measure

  14. Pedometers • Best Practice • Set goal • Record steps • Monitor and share progress • Review goals • Use to… • Team challenge • Climb Everest • Play games • Reward progress http://www.wahlyz.com/Bagaman-CLMS_Pedometer_Games.pdf http://www.choosetolivebetter.com

  15. Workplace Pedometer Competition

  16. Step Jockey www.stepjockey.com

  17. The Incentives Complete 30 minutes of physical activity Collect 30 points Keep getting active and earning points Cinema vouchers Sandwich vouchers Gym passes Decathlon/Ice Bowl Beauty vouchers Earn rewards

  18. On line Social Support Off line

  19. Graphical representation of the social network over the 12-week intervention Social interactions inferred by: time between card swipes; and, (2) frequency of similar locations of card swipes Node = participant Edges = when 2 participants swipe their card within 30 second period Thicker edge = more interactions Size of node = no. of interactions

  20. What are Queen’s doing?

  21. Cost of not investing in workplace health and wellbeing 4 x more likely to lose talented staff in next 12 months 9 x more sick days per year 3 working days per year are lost due to workplace stress 30 days of lost productivity per year due to time taken to smoke at work

  22. Thanks for Listening Interesting Point to make Dr Mark Tully Lecturer in Physical Activity and Public Health Centre for Public Health Queen’s University Belfast Email: m.tully@qub.ac.uk Twitter:@marktully_qub Dr Ruth Hunter Research Fellow Centre for Public Health Queen’s University Belfast Email: ruth.hunter@qub.ac.uk Twitter: @Ruth_HunterQUB • Why don’t we expand on this point • Maybe to a sublevel? • And maybe another • And say something to tie it up

More Related