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features

Talking point: Medical memberships

As the UK healthcare sector struggles with ever-increasing demand, health club operators are stepping in and offering members welcome medical support. Kath Hudson reports

Published in Health Club Management 2024 issue 6

The opportunity now exists for health club operators to offer access to GPs and various health checks as an add-on to memberships, creating another revenue stream, adding value for members and support for health services. Some operators in the US are going as far as offering in-depth health testing, which puts those with the means to pay in an excellent position to optimise their health.

US operator, Life Time, launched Miora Longevity and Performance in November 2023, for example. This health optimisation service involves a consultation, a diagnostic blood test and metabolic code assessment to determine the health of adrenals, thyroid, pancreas, liver, kidney, lymph, gut, the immune system, brain, cardiovascular, pulmonary and neurovascular systems, as well as hormone levels. Results are then used to create a tailored programme involving exercise, diet, HRT, IV therapies, weight loss drugs, hot and cold therapy, hyperbaric chamber and compression therapy.

This year, Equinox teamed up with Function Health to offer a US$40,000 a year membership called Optimize by Equinox, which offers 100 laboratory health tests to inform personalised programmes. Equinox partner, Dr Mark Hyman, co-founder of Function Health, said the partnership marks a historic moment when health breaks out of the doctor’s office: “By combining Equinox’s expertise and Function Health’s 100+ lab test approach, we’re unlocking a level of health and fitness that surpasses even what top doctors and biohackers can access,” he said.

In London, Surrenne at The Emory hotel (see page 84) has created a health offering alongside its gym, Tracy Anderson studio and spa, working with partners such as Virtusan and 3 Peaks Health to offer medical interventions that link into the programming of its £10,000-a-year health club membership.

In the wider health club market, many members are simply after a GP appointment, or maybe an overdue blood pressure check and this is something operators are now able to offer.

Sheffield International Venues (SIV) and Westfield Health blazed a trail in 2018, by partnering to launch a Fitness Unlimited package that allowed people to add 24/7 access to a doctor over the phone, as well as telephone counselling and membership to an online mental health and wellbeing service to their membership for between £26.60 and £38 a month, including access to leisure facilities, but very little progress was made following this, until the upsurge in interest from consumers following the pandemic.

What are the next steps for operators wanting to offer a more holistic service and access to medical interventions? We ask the experts.

Trygve Hagen
Treningshelse Holdings
photo: Treningshelse Holdings

Treningshelse Holdings, which runs clubs under brands such as Family Sports Club in the Nordics, offers Frisk Health Membership, which gives members access to health services 24 hours a day, for an additional 99kr a month (US$9.20, £7.26). Around 10 per cent of our new members sign up when they join.

To run the service we have partnerships with digital medical suppliers Kry and Nordic Netcare.

Services include video consultation with a GP from anywhere in the world; text-based prescription renewal; video consultation with a psychologist and medical nurse advice over the phone 24 hours a day. If GPs are unable to resolve the issue with a video consultation, they can refer to the specialist health service and if physical tests are needed, there is the option of working with a personal trainer.

Members using the service report a high degree of satisfaction and we find it provides additional revenue during low-season periods. For example, during summer holidays, people do not come to the clubs as much, but value having access to health services while they’re travelling, which means they’re less likely to cancel their membership.

This is an area of focus for us and we’re aiming to develop further healthcare services for our members. Many people who seek out training often have a problem with their health and we want to be able to offer specific solutions.

During holidays, people don’t come to the clubs as much, but value having access to health services while they’re travelling
Family Sports Club has a healthcare membership that helps retention / photo: Treningshelse Holdings
Dr Chris Morris
HealthHero
photo: Health Hero

HealthHero offers virtual consultations with practising doctors for a range of everyday illnesses. As part of the appointment, should the doctor feel it’s appropriate, we can offer private prescriptions for medication or referrals to secondary care. We can also signpost the patient back to their own GP or, when necessary, to NHS urgent care.

Most patients don’t require an examination or to have investigations, such as blood tests. For those patients who do, we advise them to see their NHS GP, attend an Urgent Care Centre or Emergency Department depending on the urgency of their condition.

In addition to virtual GP appointments, we also offer remote physiotherapy consultations with a focus on musculoskeletal health, to facilitate prevention and management of aches and pains. Our registered physiotherapists provide early intervention and education to help patients make proactive changes and reduce the risk of minor problems becoming more serious.

We currently work with three health and fitness operators, including Everyone Active.

We’re definitely seeing an appetite to increase access to healthcare and wellbeing services across the sector, as a valuable service to engage members, so we’re currently in discussions with other chains to provide their communities with access to HealthHero’s virtual GP service. Outside the health club sector, we work with a range of clients including corporates, insurance and cash plan providers, and SMEs.

We currently work with three UK-wide health and fitness operators and are in discussions with other chains
HealthHero is working with Everyone Active to deliver medical appointments / photo: Shutterstock / ordn
Duncan Jefford
Everyone Active
photo: Everyone Active

Everyone Active launched an Everyone Wellness membership in 2023, becoming the UK’s first leisure operator to offer fully integrated health support.

With the integration of services from our partner HealthHero into our membership benefits, customers have access to a virtual GP service via video and phone consultations. The process is managed by HealthHero, once members contact them through the app.

The wellness membership also gives customers access to a wide range of exclusive benefits to help with their mind, body and wellbeing, including free guest passes, apps that support mental wellbeing, prescribed exercise, free PT and more than 120 product savings from major wellness brands.

More than 25,000 people have signed up to a Wellness membership so far, with 25 per cent of new fitness sales choosing this option. The health support element can be added to any Everyone Active membership for £9.99 (US$13.00, €12.00) per month, while the service is also available from £7.99 (US$10.38, €9.53) as an add-on for people living with long-term health conditions who are referred to move more with us.

The service costs £55.99 (US$78.00, €66.70) a month as a standalone. The HealthHero app connects data and appointments to each customer’s doctor, and HealthHero can also refer customers directly to their doctor, therapist or urgent care after their consultation.

Since the product launch in December, only 14 per cent of appointments have resulted in referrals to doctors, which shows how the service is relieving strain on the health service.

Since the Everyone Wellness membership launched in December 2023, only 14 per cent of appointments have led to referrals
Everyone Active members can opt in to a special wellness membership / photo: Everyone Active
Emma Cunningham
Horizon Leisure
photo: Horizon Leisure

Horizon Leisure opened a Health and Wellbeing Hub last year, as an alternative way to reach members of the community where they are on their fitness journey. Designed to not look like a fitness facility, it’s located in a shopping centre and has a welcoming reception area, with sofas at the front and the gym tucked at the back.

The Hub offers blood pressure, cholesterol and health checks by highly-qualified fitness professionals, who look for early detection of conditions, as well as smoking cessation and weight management programmes and an introduction to exercise for targeted groups, such as weightlifting for men over 50 and people with high blood pressure.

The people we’re targeting wouldn’t voluntarily come to our other leisure centres – many of them still don’t see the value of physical activity and are not inclined to invest in it – so this is a way of introducing them to our services and supporting and educating them about their health. Havant has notably high adult obesity rate, at 27.2 per cent, and 68.2 per cent of adults in Hampshire have excessive weight.

We also use this service as a feeder to our leisure centres. We offer a Foundation programme, which involves four weeks at the Hub, followed by four weeks supported at a leisure centre. A year after launching, 33.3 per cent of Foundation participants have transitioned to Horizon Leisure membership and many more use the facilities on a pay as you go basis. A further 86.2 per cent said they were motivated to continue their fitness journey.

In November 2023, we launched the Community Pod, where people can pop in to do a blood pressure check, and the results are fed directly back to their doctor. Around 60 per cent need to have an intervention, which helps work towards reducing CVD risk locally.

Everything we offer is either free or very low cost. As a charitable trust, this community initiative is supported by the commercial side of the business and external funding. However, the aim is to get to the point where the service is self-sustaining. It’s a great community resource, so we’ve been approached about opening more hubs around the borough, which we are keen to do once we’ve perfected the model.

People pop in to do a blood pressure check and around 60 per cent need to have an intervention
The wellbeing hub is designed not to look like a fitness facility / photo: Horizon Leisure
Dr Jonathan Leary
Kath Hudson talks to the founder and CEO of US-based social wellness club Remedy Plac
photo: Remedy Place

HCM first reported on social wellness club Remedy Place back in 2018 and the concept is now scaling, with new locations under development.

Although not yet linked to a specific health club operator, Remedy Place is trailblazing with the types of tests and interventions it offers, as Jonathan Leary explains “Remedy Place, offers a range of functional medicine tests to optimise members’ health,” he says. “The main objective of functional medicine is to identify issues and then holistically address them. It’s all about getting to the root cause of any health concerns. Prevention hinges on catching potential issues before they become problems: functional medicine is the future of our healthcare system in the US.

“We use blood and stool tests to reveal deficiencies, toxicity levels, sensitivities, imbalances in any system or organ and much more. This extensive data collection provides a comprehensive blueprint of what’s happening in the body and all the necessary information to create an individualised programme, fix the root cause of any issues and enhance overall performance."

“To make this service more accessible and mainstream, individual tests could be offered, ideally which are most relevant to the client’s needs. A good starting point is a micronutrient test, which identifies any deficiencies. This information can help adjust diets and supplements accordingly and correcting deficiencies can lead to rapid and significant improvements in health.”

Remedy Place has been developing its offering since 2018 / photo: Remedy Place / BENJAMIN HOLTROP
Sign up here to get Fit Tech's weekly ezine and every issue of Fit Tech magazine free on digital.
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features

Talking point: Medical memberships

As the UK healthcare sector struggles with ever-increasing demand, health club operators are stepping in and offering members welcome medical support. Kath Hudson reports

Published in Health Club Management 2024 issue 6

The opportunity now exists for health club operators to offer access to GPs and various health checks as an add-on to memberships, creating another revenue stream, adding value for members and support for health services. Some operators in the US are going as far as offering in-depth health testing, which puts those with the means to pay in an excellent position to optimise their health.

US operator, Life Time, launched Miora Longevity and Performance in November 2023, for example. This health optimisation service involves a consultation, a diagnostic blood test and metabolic code assessment to determine the health of adrenals, thyroid, pancreas, liver, kidney, lymph, gut, the immune system, brain, cardiovascular, pulmonary and neurovascular systems, as well as hormone levels. Results are then used to create a tailored programme involving exercise, diet, HRT, IV therapies, weight loss drugs, hot and cold therapy, hyperbaric chamber and compression therapy.

This year, Equinox teamed up with Function Health to offer a US$40,000 a year membership called Optimize by Equinox, which offers 100 laboratory health tests to inform personalised programmes. Equinox partner, Dr Mark Hyman, co-founder of Function Health, said the partnership marks a historic moment when health breaks out of the doctor’s office: “By combining Equinox’s expertise and Function Health’s 100+ lab test approach, we’re unlocking a level of health and fitness that surpasses even what top doctors and biohackers can access,” he said.

In London, Surrenne at The Emory hotel (see page 84) has created a health offering alongside its gym, Tracy Anderson studio and spa, working with partners such as Virtusan and 3 Peaks Health to offer medical interventions that link into the programming of its £10,000-a-year health club membership.

In the wider health club market, many members are simply after a GP appointment, or maybe an overdue blood pressure check and this is something operators are now able to offer.

Sheffield International Venues (SIV) and Westfield Health blazed a trail in 2018, by partnering to launch a Fitness Unlimited package that allowed people to add 24/7 access to a doctor over the phone, as well as telephone counselling and membership to an online mental health and wellbeing service to their membership for between £26.60 and £38 a month, including access to leisure facilities, but very little progress was made following this, until the upsurge in interest from consumers following the pandemic.

What are the next steps for operators wanting to offer a more holistic service and access to medical interventions? We ask the experts.

Trygve Hagen
Treningshelse Holdings
photo: Treningshelse Holdings

Treningshelse Holdings, which runs clubs under brands such as Family Sports Club in the Nordics, offers Frisk Health Membership, which gives members access to health services 24 hours a day, for an additional 99kr a month (US$9.20, £7.26). Around 10 per cent of our new members sign up when they join.

To run the service we have partnerships with digital medical suppliers Kry and Nordic Netcare.

Services include video consultation with a GP from anywhere in the world; text-based prescription renewal; video consultation with a psychologist and medical nurse advice over the phone 24 hours a day. If GPs are unable to resolve the issue with a video consultation, they can refer to the specialist health service and if physical tests are needed, there is the option of working with a personal trainer.

Members using the service report a high degree of satisfaction and we find it provides additional revenue during low-season periods. For example, during summer holidays, people do not come to the clubs as much, but value having access to health services while they’re travelling, which means they’re less likely to cancel their membership.

This is an area of focus for us and we’re aiming to develop further healthcare services for our members. Many people who seek out training often have a problem with their health and we want to be able to offer specific solutions.

During holidays, people don’t come to the clubs as much, but value having access to health services while they’re travelling
Family Sports Club has a healthcare membership that helps retention / photo: Treningshelse Holdings
Dr Chris Morris
HealthHero
photo: Health Hero

HealthHero offers virtual consultations with practising doctors for a range of everyday illnesses. As part of the appointment, should the doctor feel it’s appropriate, we can offer private prescriptions for medication or referrals to secondary care. We can also signpost the patient back to their own GP or, when necessary, to NHS urgent care.

Most patients don’t require an examination or to have investigations, such as blood tests. For those patients who do, we advise them to see their NHS GP, attend an Urgent Care Centre or Emergency Department depending on the urgency of their condition.

In addition to virtual GP appointments, we also offer remote physiotherapy consultations with a focus on musculoskeletal health, to facilitate prevention and management of aches and pains. Our registered physiotherapists provide early intervention and education to help patients make proactive changes and reduce the risk of minor problems becoming more serious.

We currently work with three health and fitness operators, including Everyone Active.

We’re definitely seeing an appetite to increase access to healthcare and wellbeing services across the sector, as a valuable service to engage members, so we’re currently in discussions with other chains to provide their communities with access to HealthHero’s virtual GP service. Outside the health club sector, we work with a range of clients including corporates, insurance and cash plan providers, and SMEs.

We currently work with three UK-wide health and fitness operators and are in discussions with other chains
HealthHero is working with Everyone Active to deliver medical appointments / photo: Shutterstock / ordn
Duncan Jefford
Everyone Active
photo: Everyone Active

Everyone Active launched an Everyone Wellness membership in 2023, becoming the UK’s first leisure operator to offer fully integrated health support.

With the integration of services from our partner HealthHero into our membership benefits, customers have access to a virtual GP service via video and phone consultations. The process is managed by HealthHero, once members contact them through the app.

The wellness membership also gives customers access to a wide range of exclusive benefits to help with their mind, body and wellbeing, including free guest passes, apps that support mental wellbeing, prescribed exercise, free PT and more than 120 product savings from major wellness brands.

More than 25,000 people have signed up to a Wellness membership so far, with 25 per cent of new fitness sales choosing this option. The health support element can be added to any Everyone Active membership for £9.99 (US$13.00, €12.00) per month, while the service is also available from £7.99 (US$10.38, €9.53) as an add-on for people living with long-term health conditions who are referred to move more with us.

The service costs £55.99 (US$78.00, €66.70) a month as a standalone. The HealthHero app connects data and appointments to each customer’s doctor, and HealthHero can also refer customers directly to their doctor, therapist or urgent care after their consultation.

Since the product launch in December, only 14 per cent of appointments have resulted in referrals to doctors, which shows how the service is relieving strain on the health service.

Since the Everyone Wellness membership launched in December 2023, only 14 per cent of appointments have led to referrals
Everyone Active members can opt in to a special wellness membership / photo: Everyone Active
Emma Cunningham
Horizon Leisure
photo: Horizon Leisure

Horizon Leisure opened a Health and Wellbeing Hub last year, as an alternative way to reach members of the community where they are on their fitness journey. Designed to not look like a fitness facility, it’s located in a shopping centre and has a welcoming reception area, with sofas at the front and the gym tucked at the back.

The Hub offers blood pressure, cholesterol and health checks by highly-qualified fitness professionals, who look for early detection of conditions, as well as smoking cessation and weight management programmes and an introduction to exercise for targeted groups, such as weightlifting for men over 50 and people with high blood pressure.

The people we’re targeting wouldn’t voluntarily come to our other leisure centres – many of them still don’t see the value of physical activity and are not inclined to invest in it – so this is a way of introducing them to our services and supporting and educating them about their health. Havant has notably high adult obesity rate, at 27.2 per cent, and 68.2 per cent of adults in Hampshire have excessive weight.

We also use this service as a feeder to our leisure centres. We offer a Foundation programme, which involves four weeks at the Hub, followed by four weeks supported at a leisure centre. A year after launching, 33.3 per cent of Foundation participants have transitioned to Horizon Leisure membership and many more use the facilities on a pay as you go basis. A further 86.2 per cent said they were motivated to continue their fitness journey.

In November 2023, we launched the Community Pod, where people can pop in to do a blood pressure check, and the results are fed directly back to their doctor. Around 60 per cent need to have an intervention, which helps work towards reducing CVD risk locally.

Everything we offer is either free or very low cost. As a charitable trust, this community initiative is supported by the commercial side of the business and external funding. However, the aim is to get to the point where the service is self-sustaining. It’s a great community resource, so we’ve been approached about opening more hubs around the borough, which we are keen to do once we’ve perfected the model.

People pop in to do a blood pressure check and around 60 per cent need to have an intervention
The wellbeing hub is designed not to look like a fitness facility / photo: Horizon Leisure
Dr Jonathan Leary
Kath Hudson talks to the founder and CEO of US-based social wellness club Remedy Plac
photo: Remedy Place

HCM first reported on social wellness club Remedy Place back in 2018 and the concept is now scaling, with new locations under development.

Although not yet linked to a specific health club operator, Remedy Place is trailblazing with the types of tests and interventions it offers, as Jonathan Leary explains “Remedy Place, offers a range of functional medicine tests to optimise members’ health,” he says. “The main objective of functional medicine is to identify issues and then holistically address them. It’s all about getting to the root cause of any health concerns. Prevention hinges on catching potential issues before they become problems: functional medicine is the future of our healthcare system in the US.

“We use blood and stool tests to reveal deficiencies, toxicity levels, sensitivities, imbalances in any system or organ and much more. This extensive data collection provides a comprehensive blueprint of what’s happening in the body and all the necessary information to create an individualised programme, fix the root cause of any issues and enhance overall performance."

“To make this service more accessible and mainstream, individual tests could be offered, ideally which are most relevant to the client’s needs. A good starting point is a micronutrient test, which identifies any deficiencies. This information can help adjust diets and supplements accordingly and correcting deficiencies can lead to rapid and significant improvements in health.”

Remedy Place has been developing its offering since 2018 / photo: Remedy Place / BENJAMIN HOLTROP
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
Profile

Fahad Alhagbani: reinventing fitness

The team is young and ambitious, and the awareness of technology is very high. We share trends and out-of-the-box ideas almost every day
Opinion

Building on the blockchain

For small sports teams looking to compete with giants, blockchain can be a secret weapon explains Lars Rensing, CEO of Protokol
Innovation

Bold move

Our results showed a greater than 60 per cent reduction in falls for individuals who actively participated in Bold’s programme
App analysis

Check your form

Sency’s motion analysis technology is allowing users to check their technique as they exercise. Co-founder and CEO Gal Rotman explains how
Profile

New reality

Sam Cole, CEO of FitXR, talks to Fit Tech about taking digital workouts to the next level, with an immersive, virtual reality fitness club
Profile

Sohail Rashid

The app is free and it’s $40 to participate in one of our virtual events
Ageing

Reverse Ageing

Many apps help people track their health, but Humanity founders Peter Ward and Michael Geer have put the focus on ageing, to help users to see the direct repercussions of their habits. They talk to Steph Eaves
App analysis

Going hybrid

Workout Anytime created its app in partnership with Virtuagym. Workout Anytime’s Greg Maurer and Virtuagym’s Hugo Braam explain the process behind its creation
Research

Physical activity monitors boost activity levels

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have conducted a meta analysis of all relevant research and found that the body of evidence shows an impact
Editor's letter

Two-way coaching

Content providers have been hugely active in the fit tech market since the start of the pandemic. We expect the industry to move on from delivering these services on a ‘broadcast-only’ basis as two-way coaching becomes the new USP
Fit Tech People

Laurent Petit

Co-founder, Active Giving
The future of sports and fitness are dependent on the climate. Our goal is to positively influence the future of our planet by instilling a global vision of wellbeing and a sense of collective action
Fit Tech People

Adam Zeitsiff

CEO, Intelivideo
We don’t just create the technology and bail – we support our clients’ ongoing hybridisation efforts
Fit Tech People

Anantharaman Pattabiraman

CEO and co-founder, Auro
When you’re undertaking fitness activities, unless you’re on a stationary bike, in most cases it’s not safe or necessary to be tied to a screen, especially a small screen
Fit Tech People

Mike Hansen

Managing partner, Endorphinz
We noticed a big gap in the market – customers needed better insights but also recommendations on what to do, whether that be customer acquisition, content creation, marketing and more
More features