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Wake-up Call from the World Health Organization
New data from World Health Organizationโฏ(WHO) for health and exercise professionals
New data from theโฏWorld Health Organizationโฏ(WHO)โฏrepresentโฏa wake-up call for health and exercise professionals. The title of theโฏWHOโs press releaseโฏsays it all:โฏNearly 1.8 Billion Adults at Risk of Disease from Not Doing Enough Physical Activity. That means that nearly one-thirdโฏof adults worldwideโฏdoโฏnot meet the recommendation forโฏ150 minutesโฏof moderate-intensity activity,โฏ75 minutes of vigorous-intensity activity, or some combination of the two, each week.โฏโฏ
Physical inactivity impacts both the individual and the world. For the individual, insufficient physical activity increases the risk of heart disease,โฏstrokeโฏand other non-communicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes and certain cancers. On a global scale, it increases the burden on health systems and has a negative impact on the economy and communities.โฏโฏ
To make matters worse, the number of insufficiently active adults rose by approximately 5 percentage points between 2010 and 2022, despite global efforts to reverse this trend.โฏIt begs the question:โฏWhat can we do differently as an industry and as individual professionals to make a more meaningful impact on peopleโs physical-activity levels?โฏ
Before exploringโฏwhatโฏthis means to you as a health coach or exercise professional,โฏletโsโฏfirstโฏdig a little deeper into the numbers. This map of theโฏprevalence of insufficient physical activityโฏreveals some interesting data. For example, while the United States is slightly less active than the global average (33.7% vs. 31.0%), the most active nations are in Scandinaviaโฏ[Sweden (8.7%) and Finland (9.6%)]โฏand East Africa, where seven of the worldโs most active populations can be found, with Malawi leading the way with only 2.7% of its adult population being physically inactive.โฏโฏ
What can we learn from the way the people in these countries incorporate physical activity into their daily lifestyle?โฏ
Some Good News
There is some good news hidden in the numbers. Almost half of the worldโs countries have made improvements in the past decade, and 22 countries were identified as likely to reach the WHOโs goal of reducing physical activity by 15% by 2030.โฏโฏ
Inspired by these positive trends, the WHO is โcalling on countries to strengthen their policy implementation to promote and enable physical activity through grassroots and community sport and active recreation and transport (walking, cycling and use of public transport), among other measures.โโฏ
How You Can Helpโฏ
And this is where you come in, at the grassroots level. The WHOโs report challenges us all to think more creatively about behavior change and how we can help clients and communities get moving.โฏThe challenge lies in broadening our reach so that we are serving people who are not traditionally a part of the fitness industry.โฏโฏ
Ask yourself, how canโฏIโฏreach more people and inspire them to become physically active?โฏ
โThese findings underscore the urgent need for innovative strategies and proactive measures to address physical inactivity,โ says Cedric X. Bryant, PhD, FACSM, President andโฏChief Executive Officerโฏof the American Council on Exercise. โAs exercise professionals, we must lead by example and harness our knowledge and passion to inspire more people to embrace active lifestyles.โ