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Children in Wales Annual Conference 2018.

                                                                                                                                     The Whole Child:  The importance of getting it right






















            ACTIVE Children Through Individual Vouchers Evaluation (ACTIVE)

















            Background




            The physical activity levels of young people are declining.

            This means that teenagers are not receiving the health

            benefits of an active lifestyle and with heart disease,

            diabetes, cancers and mental health hitting the headlines
            more than ever, it is essential that we adopt a proactive

            method of tackling inactivity.







            What we did




            The ACTIVE Project, funded by the British Heart
            Foundation, gave teenagers in Swansea £20 of vouchers

            per month to spend on activities of their choice. This

            empowered them and allowed them to make their own
            choices regarding physical activity. They also had access

            to a peer mentor scheme and a support worker from the

            University.






            What we found




            The ACTIVE Project reduced declines in fitness

            and reduced instances of high blood pressure. The

            intervention empowered teenagers to increase their
            activity and the vouchers were a successful aspect of the

            intervention. However, more needs to happen to improve

            transport to activities, bring activities local to teenagers
            and improve knowledge of what is available.













                     How can our research help you





                     We have since asked teenagers and stakeholders to have conversations about what young people felt still

                     stopped them from being active and asked these stakeholders to start making small changes to their delivery.

                     It was evident that a lack of information, transport ease, and cost still played a major part in being active.

                     There is a need for a large community and cultural change, which this trial went someway to provoking but

                     longer sustained engagement with teenagers will create long-term behavioural change. For further information

                     on ACTIVE contact Michaela James, ACTIVE Trial Manager, Swansea University M.L.James@Swansea.ac.uk. For

                     updates on the project follow ACTIVE on Twitter @ActiveProject_













                                                                                                                                                NCPHWR is funded by





            The National Centre for Population Health & Wellbeing Research


            www.ncphwr.org.uk
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