The Leisure Media Company Ltd | Fit Tech promotion
The Leisure Media Company Ltd | Fit Tech promotion
The Leisure Media Company Ltd | Fit Tech promotion
features

Public policy: Platform for action

The EU’s Platform for Diet, Health and Physical Activity encourages key stakeholders to set up initiatives to improve the health of the population across Europe. EuropeActive’s Cliff Collins reports on a couple of successful projects

Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 4

How should we go about addressing inactivity and obesity across Europe? It’s a challenge facing us all at an individual and a societal level, and one that health clubs across the continent strive to address on a daily basis. It’s also a challenge the European Union (EU) is attempting to confront head-on.

Since 2007, there’s been an EU strategy on nutrition, health and physical activity to help fight obesity and the chronic diseases that obesity is linked to. However, the EU has acknowledged that this problem can’t be tackled with a single-pronged approach, but rather with a co-ordinated, holistic approach aimed at specific objectives: promoting healthy eating, promoting awareness of obesity-related health issues, reformulating food to make it healthier, creating opportunities for exercise, providing the right environment so physical activity becomes part of people’s lives, involving schools and local communities, and so on.

It therefore set up the EU Platform for Diet, Health and Physical Activity – an action-orientated, co-operative kind of ‘club’ that meets four times a year and that brings stakeholders from across the food and drink, medical and health, and physical activity sectors together with other interest group representatives. Encompassing everything from industry bodies and health NGOs to consumer groups, its aim is to help reverse the trend towards obesity and inactivity.

Welcome to the club
A majority of the Platform members are from, or have a direct interest in, the food and drink industry – including powerful groupings of strategists and lobbyists. Big hitters such as Nestlé, Coca-Cola, McDonalds and Danone are represented through a number of European associations. However, EuropeActive (formerly EHFA) has also been a member of the Platform since the early days, representing a minority of associations that are promoting health-enhancing physical activity.

The EU Platform is the responsibility of DG Health and Consumers (Sanco) of the EU Commission, which also chairs the meetings. Typically at each meeting there will be around 60 delegates, and twice yearly there are high-level meetings that include government representatives from EU Member States. At these times, the director general and/or commissioner will attend to give updates on progress and priorities.

It’s an important forum for the exchange of information and debates related to several policy areas, such as the provision of information to consumers at the point of sale, guidelines on daily amounts (GDA) labelling, the role of physical activity in reducing obesity, marketing to children, and reformulation of food and drink products to reduce sugar, salt and fat.

Platform Members pledge actions they will take to contribute to the overall Platform aim – namely reversing the obesity trend. There are six fields: marketing and advertising; composition of foods (reformulation), availability of healthy food options, portion sizes; consumer information, like labelling; education including lifestyle modification; physical activity promotion; and advocacy and information exchange.

The EU Commission has made several recommendations and directives off the back of Platform outcomes. These relate to the increasing regulation of advertising standards for food and drink, looking at reducing fat and sugar content of food, and reviewing food labelling requirements. It’s also progressing with a specific strategy on childhood obesity. Here we review two member projects.

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features

Public policy: Platform for action

The EU’s Platform for Diet, Health and Physical Activity encourages key stakeholders to set up initiatives to improve the health of the population across Europe. EuropeActive’s Cliff Collins reports on a couple of successful projects

Published in Health Club Management 2015 issue 4

How should we go about addressing inactivity and obesity across Europe? It’s a challenge facing us all at an individual and a societal level, and one that health clubs across the continent strive to address on a daily basis. It’s also a challenge the European Union (EU) is attempting to confront head-on.

Since 2007, there’s been an EU strategy on nutrition, health and physical activity to help fight obesity and the chronic diseases that obesity is linked to. However, the EU has acknowledged that this problem can’t be tackled with a single-pronged approach, but rather with a co-ordinated, holistic approach aimed at specific objectives: promoting healthy eating, promoting awareness of obesity-related health issues, reformulating food to make it healthier, creating opportunities for exercise, providing the right environment so physical activity becomes part of people’s lives, involving schools and local communities, and so on.

It therefore set up the EU Platform for Diet, Health and Physical Activity – an action-orientated, co-operative kind of ‘club’ that meets four times a year and that brings stakeholders from across the food and drink, medical and health, and physical activity sectors together with other interest group representatives. Encompassing everything from industry bodies and health NGOs to consumer groups, its aim is to help reverse the trend towards obesity and inactivity.

Welcome to the club
A majority of the Platform members are from, or have a direct interest in, the food and drink industry – including powerful groupings of strategists and lobbyists. Big hitters such as Nestlé, Coca-Cola, McDonalds and Danone are represented through a number of European associations. However, EuropeActive (formerly EHFA) has also been a member of the Platform since the early days, representing a minority of associations that are promoting health-enhancing physical activity.

The EU Platform is the responsibility of DG Health and Consumers (Sanco) of the EU Commission, which also chairs the meetings. Typically at each meeting there will be around 60 delegates, and twice yearly there are high-level meetings that include government representatives from EU Member States. At these times, the director general and/or commissioner will attend to give updates on progress and priorities.

It’s an important forum for the exchange of information and debates related to several policy areas, such as the provision of information to consumers at the point of sale, guidelines on daily amounts (GDA) labelling, the role of physical activity in reducing obesity, marketing to children, and reformulation of food and drink products to reduce sugar, salt and fat.

Platform Members pledge actions they will take to contribute to the overall Platform aim – namely reversing the obesity trend. There are six fields: marketing and advertising; composition of foods (reformulation), availability of healthy food options, portion sizes; consumer information, like labelling; education including lifestyle modification; physical activity promotion; and advocacy and information exchange.

The EU Commission has made several recommendations and directives off the back of Platform outcomes. These relate to the increasing regulation of advertising standards for food and drink, looking at reducing fat and sugar content of food, and reviewing food labelling requirements. It’s also progressing with a specific strategy on childhood obesity. Here we review two member projects.

Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
More features
Editor's letter

Into the fitaverse

Fitness is already among the top three markets in the metaverse, with new technology and partnerships driving real growth and consumer engagement that looks likely to spill over into health clubs, gyms and studios
Fit Tech people

Ali Jawad

Paralympic powerlifter and founder, Accessercise
Users can easily identify which facilities in the UK are accessible to the disabled community
Fit Tech people

Hannes Sjöblad

MD, DSruptive
We want to give our users an implantable tool that allows them to collect their health data at any time and in any setting
Fit Tech people

Jamie Buck

Co-founder, Active in Time
We created a solution called AiT Voice, which turns digital data into a spoken audio timetable that connects to phone systems
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My vision was to create a platform that could improve the sport for lifters at all levels and attract more people, similar to how Strava, Peloton and Zwift have in other sports
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