Physical Inactivity (Public Health) Debate

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Department: Department of Health and Social Care

Physical Inactivity (Public Health)

Iain McKenzie Excerpts
Tuesday 18th November 2014

(10 years, 1 month ago)

Westminster Hall
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Iain McKenzie Portrait Mr Iain McKenzie (Inverclyde) (Lab)
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Thank you, Mr Weir, for calling me to speak. It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship again.

I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Blaenau Gwent (Nick Smith) on securing this important debate, because we are very aware that inactivity has a direct impact on health, as we are so obviously seeing across the country.

Quite simply, our lives have changed. Many people now work in non-physically demanding jobs, where they spend many hours in front of a screen, before heading home to spend many more hours in front of a screen. Our leisure pursuits have changed as well, and even more so for our young. As we have heard, online games etc. are providing great competition for the more traditional games and sports in children’s leisure time.

Inactivity and poor diet are taking their toll. We see that in our hospitals and in our health centres. As you will know, Mr Weir, many GPs in Scotland are now prescribing activity, in the form of “gym prescriptions”.

The UK is staring at an epidemic of poor health brought on by obesity, which is due to a lack of activity and a poor diet. This is happening across the UK, where the only thing that seems to be getting faster is our eating habits. Drive-through food outlets can be seen everywhere. These are fine if they are visited infrequently, but unfortunately some people visit them frequently.

As we know, prevention is always better than cure. In Scotland, we are ahead of other parts of the UK and the world in suffering from this obesity epidemic; I suspect that you will agree with me, Mr Weir, when I say that that is the only world league table that we do not want to top. The problem hit us some years ago, and we had to take serious action to try to reverse the trend and prevent another generation from becoming inactive.

Top of all the unhealthy league tables—that is where we in Scotland found ourselves. Heart problems and diabetes brought on by a poor diet and people being overweight, coupled with smoking-related illnesses and the impact of over-drinking, all damaged our health, and at younger ages. We were seeing health problems associated with people in their 80s taking hold while people were in their 40s. We needed to get more active, and to improve our quality of life in so many ways. We needed to promote activity and sport for all. I am glad to say that that message is getting through. I myself am a Zumba orphan; my mother spends more time doing Zumba than she does on the phone, or talking to me.

My constituency of Inverclyde built all-new schools with state-of-the-art sports facilities. Inverclyde schools’ sport facilities are first class and free for use by our communities. We also employed sports co-ordinators to introduce kids to a variety of sports and even more importantly to continue that sporting activity by linking up with clubs after school. The last time we did that I myself was in secondary school. That was when we built new facilities and I was introduced to a new indoor sport called basketball. In Inverclyde, we also offer free swimming to kids under 16, as well as free hire of 2G, 3G and—even in Scotland’s climate—grass pitches for under-19 teams. Funding all that is not easy, but if we did not, the cost in the future would be quite simply unbearable. We bought into the legacy of the London Olympics and the Commonwealth games in Glasgow, using those events to excite people and promote activity.

Inverclyde educates and promotes the importance of getting active, and of healthy eating. You are what you eat. We tell youngsters that if they put rubbish in, they will get rubbish out, especially in sport. We are educating our kids to cut out as much sugar as possible, and to eat “five a day”. The message is getting through. I paid a visit to a school, where I ate a school meal, and one of the pupils told a teacher that I had only three pieces of fruit and not five. I was guilty, and had to take another two pieces. So, as I say, the message is getting through.

We have been removing fizzy drinks from schools, and replacing them with water. However, we cannot do that on our own. We need our supermarkets to buy into this process too. We simply need to ask: why is fruit more expensive than sweets? We should remove sweets from the checkout area. We should also make things easier for hard-working families, because the fruit and vegetables that they are taking home are not lasting the full week and they have to make further trips to the supermarket to stock up.

In conclusion, what can the Government do? I should like to offer some low-cost solutions that I am sure they would be interested in. They could do more to promote sport and an active life style; they could approach supermarkets about their short sell-by date food-laden shelves and about ready meals; and they could emphasise the reduction in sugar consumption. Activity can be a small part of people’s day, but it is a big part of their life.