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MBE for Health Walk founder | Walking the way to health

February 15th, 2010 by admin

MBE for Health Walk founder | Walking the way to health.

Dr William Bird, Health Walk founder and Natural England’s Strategic Health Advisor, has been awarded an MBE in the 2010 New Year Honours List in recognition of his services to health care and to physical activity.

Dr Bird developed the concept of health walks in 1995 whilst working as an Oxfordshire GP and established the first health walk scheme for his patients at Sonning Common Health Centre. He then worked with the Countryside Agency and the British Heart Foundation to establish the Walking the Way to Health Initiative (now WfH) and has been involved in this field ever since.

Seventy per cent of people in England are inactive and this needs to change. Walking is a fundamental way of maintaining physical activity and our eventual aim is to give every GP in the country access to a local WfH scheme so that they can all refer patients to take part in an accredited walking scheme.

The success of Walking for Health is directly linked to its location “ the natural environment “ which has been proven to give people staying power when it comes to exercise. Dr Bird

Dr Bird has also been involved in the Green Gym and chairs the Outdoor Health Forum. He was the medical adviser to The British Heart Foundation National Centre for Physical Activity and Health atLoughborough University when it was first established. As an independent member of the National Access Forum, he helped advise the Countryside Agency and Government on the Countryside and Rights of Way Bill. Dr Bird is a vice president of the British Trust for Conservation Volunteers, has held Honorary Research Posts at Oxford Brookes and Oxford University, and set up the Health Forecasting Unit at the Met Office where he was Clinical Director.


Blue Gym promo film

February 11th, 2010 by Michael Depledge


Find more videos like this on The Blue Gym

Cornwall’s Health : From here to uncertainty

November 19th, 2009 by Michael Depledge

Cornwall’s Health : From here to uncertainty .

Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society Annual Lecture 2009 with Professor Michael Depledge

A thought provoking evening with one of Europe’s leading environmental advisors.  Explore the environmental and health challenges faced by Cornwall today and ways in which we can adapt to the future

7.00 pm Monday 30th November 2009 Hall for Cornwall, Truro

Tickets £4.00 from the box office : 01872 262 466

http://www.hallforcornwall.co.uk/

The speaker is Professor of Environment and Human Health at the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry. A leading specialist in the impact of the environment on human health and wellbeing, Professor Depledge is a member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, Board Member of Natural England, Chairman of the European Commission’s Science Advisory Committee on Environment and Climate Change and a member of the Harvard School of Public Health.

His lecture will cover climate change, demographics and biodiversity and will show how scientists and medical experts in Cornwall will take an international lead role in research in this field which will bring great benefits to the county.

The event will also see the first screening of the Blue Gym video.   The Blue Gym is a national project from Natural England being piloted in the South West with the Peninsula College.  It is about promoting the mental and physical benefits of physical activity, including active conservation along a healthy coastal and marine environment.

The event will be chaired by Kevin Lavery, Chief Executive of Cornwall Council.  Tickets are £4.00 each and the audience will have the opportunity to talk to the speakers on stage after the event. Some of the money from ticket sales will go to the Lord Lieutenant’s Fund For Youth and will help pay travel expenses for local Olympic athletes.  The lecture will be podcast.

If you would like to find out more about Michael Depledge please see the Peninsula Medical School Website.

The Blue Gym by William Bird | Campaign for Greener Healthcare

November 19th, 2009 by William Bird

The Blue Gym by William Bird | Campaign for Greener Healthcare.

The Blue Gym is about enjoying our water environment!

Whether you are a complete beginner or an expert in a sport, whether you just want to go for a walk next to the sea or rivers, to learn about and watch wildlife, or get into more challenging activities, the Blue Gym is for you. Remember the best sailor, surfer or rock pool rambler is the one having the most fun!

The Blue Gym will create an information hub and showcase to encourage activities and usage of the coastline and inland waters. It will help make water accessible and relevant to everyone.

Regular contact with the natural environment results in many benefits including:

- Reduction in Stress
- Increased Physical Activity and therefore fitness
- Stronger Communities
- An increased awareness of the value of the natural environment

For you and other people, the Blue Gym is a chance to learn about new sports, activities and interests. It also gives you the chance to meet like-minded people, join groups or clubs and find and share videos, pictures and thoughts around anything to do with water. For those who already take part in a sport or activity it can be a great chance to encourage and teach others and to pass on some of that feel good factor that you get from the water. One of my best friends is someone who I taught to surf after he’d had a heart attack. He’s now in the water all year round and he’s loads fitter!

For organisations, clubs and even just loose groups, it gives a chance to show-case what you’re up to, attract new members, exchange information about events, campaigns and communicate with everyone out there.

The Blue Gym is a Peninsula Medical School initiative supported by the Environment Agency and Natural England and the Department of Health.

www.bluegym.org.uk

info@bluegym.org.uk

Articles · Future Countryside

November 19th, 2009 by Melanie Smith

Trees for healthier communities

Woods and trees have a huge role to play in creating and sustaining healthy communities, as recognised by Natural England in its new ‘Natural Health Service' manifesto.  However, fewer than 15 per cent of people currently live within easy walking distance of a wood despite the recognised health benefits woods provide in encouraging exercise, helping reduce the mental stresses of modern life, and improving air quality. A study suggested that doubling tree cover in the West Midlands could reduce excess deaths due to air borne particulates by 140 a year, in addition to reduction in chronic respiratory conditions. The economic impacts of this sort of change are enormous.

via Articles · Future Countryside.

DUTCH EVIDENCE OF A LINK BETWEEN GREEN SPACES AND HEALTH.

November 19th, 2009 by Aileen Marshall

I saw this in this week’s SDRN mailing. This is really interesting and relates closely with recent discussions of the OHN members.

SDRN Mailing: Monday 16th November 2009
View the HTML version online:
http://www.sd-research.org.uk/post.php?p=1124

DUTCH EVIDENCE OF A LINK BETWEEN GREEN SPACES AND HEALTH.
In a new study that assessed how GP-classified illnesses relate to green spaces in their patients’ living environment, researchers in the Netherlands have found more evidence that links green spaces to better health, and better mental health in particular. The study was undertaken by Dr Jolanda Maas from the EMGO Institute at VU University Medical Centre in Amsterdam and colleagues, and was published as an Online First paper on 15th October in the ‘Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health’. The researchers used health indicators from general practitioner (GP) assessments to investigate suggestions that living near green spaces is linked to better health. The researchers examined data on illnesses recorded by 195 GPs in practices throughout the Netherlands. The illnesses recorded by the GPs were classified using the International Classification of Primary Care (ICPC), allowing the researchers to examine 24 different diseases in seven different categories. The researchers also used a database where, by inserting postal codes, they could find out the percentage of green space within a one and three kilometer radius of a household. They then used multilevel logistic regression to find which clusters of diseases most strongly linked to how much green space was nearby. When they did the analyses they first controlled for demographic and socio-economic characteristics to minimize any potential effect they may have had on the results, and then looked at what effect they did have. The results showed that: there was a positive link between lower disease prevalence and more green space; the annual prevalence rate of 15 of the 24 disease clusters was lower in environments that had more green space in a 1 km radius; the strongest link was for anxiety disorder and depression; the link was stronger for children and for people with a lower socio-economic status; and, the link was strongest in slightly urban areas and not apparent in very strongly urban areas. More… (http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/167561.php).

UIBEN Nov 9 OHN Presentation

November 10th, 2009 by Melanie Smith

Andrew Church and I presented the attached presentation to the UIBEN networks meeting on the 9th November 2009. The day was filled with an exchange of ideas, information and experiences from around the network. Some interesting perspectives on new ways to research an understand individudal behaviours were explained. For example, using bluetooth technology in mobile phones to capture social contacts and thus model the potential for spread of disease; examning the influences and triggers for individual decision making; testing the role of animals in determining human behaviour; and quantifying the well being effect of natural ’soundscape’ music through MRI scans.

There were plenty of opportunities to discuss links between networks; areas for future collaboration and potential for the UIBEN to focus on primary goals for research in this area in the future. All the presentations will be circulated to those at the meeting to get comments on where areas of commonality had been identified and where there are gaps.
uiben-ohn-presentation-nov-09

Children and Outdoors Literature Review

September 24th, 2009 by Aileen Marshall

Dr Sarah-Anne Munoz, a co-investigator in the Outdoors and Health Network recently published a literature review on the children and outdoors. The review was supported by the Forestry Commission, Countryside Recreation Network and the Outdoor Health Forum. Sarah-Anne is currently carrying out research at the Centre for Rural Health UHI.

Childhood has long been associated in our collective imagination with images of the ‘rural’ and the ‘countryside’ because adult conceptualisations of the child as ‘innocent’ are connected with nature. Many children’s books, programmes and films incorporate these notions - involving ‘natural’ spaces, animal characters or visions of rural childhood. Societal fears have impacted on this vision of childhood - with concern over crime and children’s safety in public spaces linked with a decreasing amount of time spent by children in the outdoors. Recent research has started to examine the links between use of the outdoors, access to greenspace and health, and policy-makers have also begun to look at promoting the use of outdoors as a means for increasing public health. Children have been identified as one of the key groups that could gain health benefits from use of the outdoors - but also one that requires evidence-based policy directed towards their needs. This review therefore takes an in-depth look at the current themes within health, outdoors and children’s research and highlights how these relate to understanding the links between children’s use of outdoor spaces and health outcomes. It also highlights where there are research gaps and how these might be addressed. More… http://www.countrysiderecreation.org.uk/Children%20Outdoors.pdf

Walking Workshop: Walking as Method and Practice

May 29th, 2009 by Peter Varley

The attached might be of interest to OHN members …

WALKING WORKSHOP: Walking as Method and Practice

Thursday the 11th June, 2009
Cardiff University

A one day workshop is taking place in Cardiff University on Thursday the 11th June. The aim of this workshop is to provide a forum for the sharing of ideas and approaches across disciplinary boundaries, regarding walking as research method and practice. Building on previous ‘walking’ events this event will encourage an interdisciplinary exchange of knowledge, debate and discussion on methodological developments around mobility, in relation to place making practices and to understandings of everyday experiences through embodied, multi-sensory research experiences.

Ideas and practice in the arts are increasingly and usefully being drawn upon to develop understandings of place, space and practice, and we can see the beginnings of much cross fertilization of ideas. This event will capitalize on this interest, creating a forum for the exchange of knowledges by including inputs from those in the social sciences with expertise in walking as research method, and from those in the arts with expertise in walking as art practice.

The day is structured to facilitate knowledge transfer and discussion, with five speakers sharing their knowledge and ideas on walking as a method and as art practice. The discussions that follow each session will be led by another expert in the field. The speakers are Jennie Middleton, John Wylie, Simon Pope and Tom Hall and Rob Smith, with Jon Anderson and Mike Fedeski as discussants. As part of the workshop, there will also be a soundwalk around Cardiff at lunchtime, organized by the artist Jennie Savage, allowing participants to experience some of the theory in practice. There will be a question and answer session after the soundwalk.

There is a small fee of £25 to cover the costs of this event which includes lunch, refreshments and the soundwalk.

We are also interested in providing a showcase for other walking related research and practice, as a way of promoting discussion and awareness of different projects. We hope to facilitate this by having posters on display, and would encourage those attending to bring along a poster of their work.

Spaces are limited to 30. If you would like to attend, please email Kate Moles at molesk@cf.ac.uk as soon as possible to secure your place.

Please circulate this information to anyone who you think might be interested in the event.

MAKING THE LINKS: GREENSPACE FOR A MORE SUCCESSFUL AND SUSTAINABLE SCOTLAND’

May 22nd, 2009 by Aileen Marshall

I saw this in the SDRN mailing this week and thought it looked interesting:

NEW BOOK – ‘MAKING THE LINKS: GREENSPACE FOR A MORE SUCCESSFUL AND SUSTAINABLE SCOTLAND’.
‘Making the Links’ blends case studies from across urban Scotland with international research to demonstrate how greenspace contributes to the Scottish Government’s five strategic objectives and creates healthier, safer and stronger, wealthier and fairer, smarter and greener communities.  The book also sets out the actions that are needed by a range of partners to make greenspace deliver these benefits and signposts readers to a range of useful tools and resources, as well as highlighting examples of good practice from across the country. More… (www.greenspacescotland.org.uk/makingthelinks).

Exceprt from the SDRN Mailing: Monday 18th May 2009
Read the HTML version online: http://www.sd-research.org.uk/post.php?p=1005

Restorative Commons: creating health and well-being through urban landscapes

May 8th, 2009 by Sarah-Anne Munoz

Another interesting publication that I’ve come across on-line is “Restorative Commons: creating health and well-being through urban landscapes” from the US Forest Service. It brings together a lot of interesting work with case studies and interviews.

 

http://tiny.cc/5Uti8

Children’s Learning Outdoors

May 1st, 2009 by Sarah-Anne Munoz

I attended a meeting recently where I gave a presentation on a literature review that I’ve written on children’s use of the outdoors. One of the delegates enquired about how outdoor learning fits into the Curriculum for Excellence – this wasn’t something I had specifically addressed during my review of the literature but I had discussed informally with enthusiastic colleagues within the teaching community. They pointed me to the ‘Learning and Teaching Scotland’ Outdoor Learning website, which is a great resource http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/outdoorlearning/index.asp

There is a section detailing the links between the Curriculum for Excellence and outdoor learning. It highlights that education within the outdoor environment produces multiple benefits for children, and groups these into the achievement of “four capacities”:

“Successful learners”

“Confident individuals”

“Responsible citizens”

“Effective contributors”

 

The research section of the website links to some interesting reports http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/outdoorlearning/keyinformation/research/index.asp

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