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NEWS
£346m childcare cash surplus 'should be used to get kids active'
POSTED 19 Sep 2018 . BY Tom Walker
The report calls for funding to help support parents keep children physically active outside of school hours
More than £346m in "wasted" childcare funding should be used to get children more active and fight the growing epidemic of health issues among the young.

That's the message from ukactive, which has called on the government to redirect the Treasury underspend – allocated to tax-free childcare – to physical activity programmes.

In a report, called Generation Inactive 2 - Nothing About Us, Without Us, ukactive says the funding would help support parents to keep children physically active outside of school hours, with figures showing that over the summer holidays children lose up to 80 per cent of the fitness gained during term time.

The report also lays out a blueprint to tackle the barriers to physical activity for children and young people, mapping out the changes needed at every level in order to take a "more holistic approach to health, happiness and wellbeing" by focusing on active play and fun.

Generation Inactive 2 - Nothing About Us, Without Us is based on findings from what ukactive describes as the "largest consultation on children’s physical activity in recent times".

Other recommendations made in the report include developing schools into community hubs – integrating health, education and social care provision within schools – and for Ofsted to create an Inspection Framework that places pupil’s physical health and development at the heart of its evaluation schedule.

It also calls for all major political parties UK-wide committing to a 20-year public health campaign turn "generation inactive to generation active" by 2038 and for government to hold departments accountable for actively involving the views of children and young people in strategic health decision and policy-making.

“This is the least active generation ever, with evidence showing that inactive children become inactive adults at risk of a host of preventable diseases," said chair of ukactive Tanni Grey-Thompson.

“Unspent childcare funds from the Treasury can be put to better use and actually help parents where they need it most by providing fun and social physical activity programmes for children.

“There is no silver bullet so this report calls for a collective effort across government and every part of society to turn Generation Inactive into Generation Active.”

Children’s Commissioner Anne Longfield added: “We must make physical activity and play a public health priority for all children and young people, with practical solutions to make activities more accessible and appealing.

“Only by working together will we deliver the changes necessary to protect the health of future generations.”
RELATED STORIES
  ukactive Research Institute to speed up the delivery of research to sector


The ukactive Research Institute has announced plans to make all academic research it conducts available as 'pre-print articles' to stakeholders in the physical activity sector.
  Tanni Grey-Thompson: 'Elevate physical activity from the fringes to the heart of our political debate'


Ukactive chair Tanni Grey-Thompson has made a passionate call for the government to finally recognise the importance of physical activity and to include it at the "heart" of the UK's political debate.
  FEATURE: Talking point: Generation inactive


Today’s kids are the fattest, least active generation ever. How can we intervene?
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NEWS
£346m childcare cash surplus 'should be used to get kids active'
POSTED 19 Sep 2018 . BY Tom Walker
The report calls for funding to help support parents keep children physically active outside of school hours
More than £346m in "wasted" childcare funding should be used to get children more active and fight the growing epidemic of health issues among the young.

That's the message from ukactive, which has called on the government to redirect the Treasury underspend – allocated to tax-free childcare – to physical activity programmes.

In a report, called Generation Inactive 2 - Nothing About Us, Without Us, ukactive says the funding would help support parents to keep children physically active outside of school hours, with figures showing that over the summer holidays children lose up to 80 per cent of the fitness gained during term time.

The report also lays out a blueprint to tackle the barriers to physical activity for children and young people, mapping out the changes needed at every level in order to take a "more holistic approach to health, happiness and wellbeing" by focusing on active play and fun.

Generation Inactive 2 - Nothing About Us, Without Us is based on findings from what ukactive describes as the "largest consultation on children’s physical activity in recent times".

Other recommendations made in the report include developing schools into community hubs – integrating health, education and social care provision within schools – and for Ofsted to create an Inspection Framework that places pupil’s physical health and development at the heart of its evaluation schedule.

It also calls for all major political parties UK-wide committing to a 20-year public health campaign turn "generation inactive to generation active" by 2038 and for government to hold departments accountable for actively involving the views of children and young people in strategic health decision and policy-making.

“This is the least active generation ever, with evidence showing that inactive children become inactive adults at risk of a host of preventable diseases," said chair of ukactive Tanni Grey-Thompson.

“Unspent childcare funds from the Treasury can be put to better use and actually help parents where they need it most by providing fun and social physical activity programmes for children.

“There is no silver bullet so this report calls for a collective effort across government and every part of society to turn Generation Inactive into Generation Active.”

Children’s Commissioner Anne Longfield added: “We must make physical activity and play a public health priority for all children and young people, with practical solutions to make activities more accessible and appealing.

“Only by working together will we deliver the changes necessary to protect the health of future generations.”
RELATED STORIES
ukactive Research Institute to speed up the delivery of research to sector


The ukactive Research Institute has announced plans to make all academic research it conducts available as 'pre-print articles' to stakeholders in the physical activity sector.
Tanni Grey-Thompson: 'Elevate physical activity from the fringes to the heart of our political debate'


Ukactive chair Tanni Grey-Thompson has made a passionate call for the government to finally recognise the importance of physical activity and to include it at the "heart" of the UK's political debate.
FEATURE: Talking point: Generation inactive


Today’s kids are the fattest, least active generation ever. How can we intervene?
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Bannatyne has bounced back from the pandemic
The Bannatyne Group says it has officially bounced back from the pandemic, with both turnover and profits restored to pre-2020 levels in 2023, according to its year-end results.
Basic-Fit hints Spanish Holmes Place clubs might be sold
There is speculation that Basic Fit will sell the five Spanish Holmes Place clubs it has just acquired from RSG Group in a 47-club deal.
Nuffield Health calls for National Movement Strategy as research shows decline in fitness levels among some consumers
Nuffield Health’s fourth annual survey, the Healthier Nation Index, has found people moved slightly more in 2023 than 2022, but almost 75 per cent are still not meeting WHO guidelines.
Immediate rewards can motivate people to exercise, finds new research
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