Date post: | 02-Nov-2014 |
Category: |
Health & Medicine |
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Health ImpactsHealth ImpactsHow to plan for, deliver and demonstrate the How to plan for, deliver and demonstrate the
health impacts of your projecthealth impacts of your project
“The potential benefits of physical activity are huge. If a medication existed which has a similar effect, it would be regarded as a wonder drug or miracle cure.”
Professor Sir Liam Donaldson
Chief Medical Officer, March 2010
Learning outcomes
You will be able to:
1. Identify, plan for and demonstrate the health impacts of your project
(or at least have a better idea of where to start)
Quiz – fill in the blanks
• Children and young people (5-18) should do at least ___ minutes of ____intensity activity every day
• Adults (19-64) should do at least ___ minutes of moderate intensity activity, or at least ___ minutes of ____intensity activity weekly
• __ % of boys and __ % of girls in England do the recommended amount of activity
• Those in the ____ income quartile are more likely than those in the ____ income quartile to be doing the recommended amount
Education
Genes
Physical activity
Sex
Drugs
Crime
Pollution
Alcohol
Training
Job
Neighbours
Smoking
Green space
Noise
StressMoney
Family
Friends
Sleep
The determinants of health
Employment
Training
Inclusion
Positive Activities
Coaching
Talent Developmen
t
Volunteering
Participation
Wellbeing
Drugs &
Alcohol
Teenage pregnanc
yObesit
y
Health
Crime
Sport
Regeneration
StreetGames
Tools
1,000 newDoorstep Sport Clubs
Who commissions?
Currently:
PCTs and some local authorities
with
Discretionary budgets
Coming soon:
Local authorities and Health & Wellbeing Boards
with
Ring-fenced funding
What is commissioning?
A structured way of deciding how public money should be spent strategically.
It involves: Assessing need Identifying resources available Procuring services Monitoring and evaluating
It is more than just contracting.
Doorstep Sport Clubs as Health
Improvement Agencies
Why bother?
Delivering and demonstrating health impacts is:
Good for your participants
Good for your credibility as a project
And it:
Improves your chances of funding, especially from health sources
Sets you apart from other projects
The truths
You don’t need to be experts in public health
You don’t need to know how the body works medically
You do need to understand what Directors of Public Health want
You do need to prove you can help e.g. by getting people active long-term
National work
• Responsibility Deal
• National partners (CTC, MEND)
• Tools
• Pilots
• NHS
• Briefing papers