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Wednesday, March 18, 2009
London Olympics will not inspire inactive people to take up sport
The quote here is true, but the headline is not. Yes, elite sport rarely inspires/motivates physical activity take up among non participants and the least active...
BUT: The non-sporting aspects of the Olympic Games (eg the Cultural Olympiad) CAN contribute to physical activity take up among the least active via a "festival effect". This is clear in the full press release (and the report) which can be accessed via the link in the original post.
I provided a link to the whole press release so that my readers can judge for themselves. Still, thanks for pointing it out.
I remain convinced that spending the original Olympic budget on community sports clubs and other groups would have been a far better way of improving the health of the general population. As it is, those groups are being starved of funds to pay for the Games.
The study was jointly funded by five Department of Health Regional Offices (SE, London, EoE, WM, EM)...this is outlined at the start of both the report and the quick reference guide.
The report is quite clear about what London 2012 may and may not be able to do, and includes a detailed consideration of how to evaluate the "opportunity cost" of investing in Olympic programmes for physical activity and for sport.
A key message, however, is that physical activity take-up among the least active is unlikely to be via formal sporting activities. "Sport" and "Physical Activity" are rarely interchangable in this respect.
Odd. Studies seem to discover this every eight years or so; not every four years as the Olympic cycle would suggest.
ReplyDeleteA little disingenuous I'm afraid....
ReplyDeleteThe quote here is true, but the headline is not. Yes, elite sport rarely inspires/motivates physical activity take up among non participants and the least active...
BUT:
The non-sporting aspects of the Olympic Games (eg the Cultural Olympiad) CAN contribute to physical activity take up among the least active via a "festival effect". This is clear in the full press release (and the report) which can be accessed via the link in the original post.
Not disingenuous at all.
ReplyDeleteI provided a link to the whole press release so that my readers can judge for themselves. Still, thanks for pointing it out.
I remain convinced that spending the original Olympic budget on community sports clubs and other groups would have been a far better way of improving the health of the general population. As it is, those groups are being starved of funds to pay for the Games.
May I ask who funded your study?
The study was jointly funded by five Department of Health Regional Offices (SE, London, EoE, WM, EM)...this is outlined at the start of both the report and the quick reference guide.
ReplyDeleteThe report is quite clear about what London 2012 may and may not be able to do, and includes a detailed consideration of how to evaluate the "opportunity cost" of investing in Olympic programmes for physical activity and for sport.
A key message, however, is that physical activity take-up among the least active is unlikely to be via formal sporting activities. "Sport" and "Physical Activity" are rarely interchangable in this respect.
Mike
ReplyDeleteHave you got the URL for the full report?
Many thanks