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S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity

Policymakers often lack the evidence to drive change and improve the lives of citizens through physical activity. This symposium will discuss how two unique global programs, ‘Active Citizens Worldwide' (ACW) and ‘Sport Impacts: Children' (SIC), have bridged the gap between academia and pol...

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Autores principales: Portas, Elena, Cowen, Charlie, Birdsall-Strong, Lottie, Scott, Chris
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9421870/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac093.001
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author Portas, Elena
Cowen, Charlie
Birdsall-Strong, Lottie
Scott, Chris
author_facet Portas, Elena
Cowen, Charlie
Birdsall-Strong, Lottie
Scott, Chris
author_sort Portas, Elena
collection PubMed
description Policymakers often lack the evidence to drive change and improve the lives of citizens through physical activity. This symposium will discuss how two unique global programs, ‘Active Citizens Worldwide' (ACW) and ‘Sport Impacts: Children' (SIC), have bridged the gap between academia and policymakers. Combining advanced data analytics, the latest in health, social and economic research and global benchmarking these programs have delivered unique insights on the drivers and outcomes of physical activity. ACW is a city-based programme formed through a collaboration of 4 cities: London, Stockholm, Singapore and Auckland. The project uses advanced analytics on large datasets covering entire cities to inform policymakers' efforts to enhance participation levels, and to calculate the monetary and non-monetary value that sport and physical activity has on society. Previously unrelated datasets have been integrated to provide completely new analytical insights on the true drivers of the complex physical activity system including facility access, and mindsets and motivations.This is combined with systematic modelling of the broad range of outputs and outcomes of physical activity including health, social, and economic benefits.This standardisation in modelling approach and analysis has enabled multiple cities to compare, benchmark and learn from each other. ACW ultimately enables cities to understand what is working and what is not in their city, and thereby design policies with the best chance of improving their city's health, wealth and wellbeing. Using a similar approach, the SIC initiative is a unique cross-sectorial collaboration between top national sports bodies, charities and academics in England. Through this partnership each organisation shared national participation, workforce and facility databases as well as recent primary research, which was analysed and modelled to give a holistic overview of the drivers and outcomes of childhood participation in sport. This analysis shows that the access to and benefits of sport and physical activity is not equal between different demographic groups. Preliminary findings have also indicated which type of sports and activities contribute the most value to children and their communities. This has led to the creation of a strong evidence base of the social and economic impact of childhood physical activity and sport in England, which is already being used by sport bodies and policymakers to re-evaluate their approaches to childhood participation. These programs illustrate how a collaborative approach using data and analytics has connected research with policy and practice and lead to substantial impacts in countries around the world. Organizer and speaker: Elena Portas, Chair: Charlie Cowen,
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spelling pubmed-94218702022-08-29 S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity Portas, Elena Cowen, Charlie Birdsall-Strong, Lottie Scott, Chris Eur J Public Health Symposium Policymakers often lack the evidence to drive change and improve the lives of citizens through physical activity. This symposium will discuss how two unique global programs, ‘Active Citizens Worldwide' (ACW) and ‘Sport Impacts: Children' (SIC), have bridged the gap between academia and policymakers. Combining advanced data analytics, the latest in health, social and economic research and global benchmarking these programs have delivered unique insights on the drivers and outcomes of physical activity. ACW is a city-based programme formed through a collaboration of 4 cities: London, Stockholm, Singapore and Auckland. The project uses advanced analytics on large datasets covering entire cities to inform policymakers' efforts to enhance participation levels, and to calculate the monetary and non-monetary value that sport and physical activity has on society. Previously unrelated datasets have been integrated to provide completely new analytical insights on the true drivers of the complex physical activity system including facility access, and mindsets and motivations.This is combined with systematic modelling of the broad range of outputs and outcomes of physical activity including health, social, and economic benefits.This standardisation in modelling approach and analysis has enabled multiple cities to compare, benchmark and learn from each other. ACW ultimately enables cities to understand what is working and what is not in their city, and thereby design policies with the best chance of improving their city's health, wealth and wellbeing. Using a similar approach, the SIC initiative is a unique cross-sectorial collaboration between top national sports bodies, charities and academics in England. Through this partnership each organisation shared national participation, workforce and facility databases as well as recent primary research, which was analysed and modelled to give a holistic overview of the drivers and outcomes of childhood participation in sport. This analysis shows that the access to and benefits of sport and physical activity is not equal between different demographic groups. Preliminary findings have also indicated which type of sports and activities contribute the most value to children and their communities. This has led to the creation of a strong evidence base of the social and economic impact of childhood physical activity and sport in England, which is already being used by sport bodies and policymakers to re-evaluate their approaches to childhood participation. These programs illustrate how a collaborative approach using data and analytics has connected research with policy and practice and lead to substantial impacts in countries around the world. Organizer and speaker: Elena Portas, Chair: Charlie Cowen, Oxford University Press 2022-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9421870/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac093.001 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Symposium
Portas, Elena
Cowen, Charlie
Birdsall-Strong, Lottie
Scott, Chris
S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title_full S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title_fullStr S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title_full_unstemmed S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title_short S01 Providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
title_sort s01 providing policymakers with the evidence and practices to act and improve lives through physical activity
topic Symposium
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9421870/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac093.001
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