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Actions – Local Authorities Action1 #351719
| Context from the October 2011 Healthy Lives, Healthy People: A Call to Action on Obesity: [1] Local authorities took on new responsibilities for public health from April 2013, and they have a lead role in implementing the obesity strategy where it has been identified as a local priority. - From 2013-14 the Department of Health has allocated ring-fenced public health grants to upper-tier and unitary local authorities to improve the health of their local populations (with the Authorities giving the Department an annual breakdown of how they have spent the grant, against a number of public health services, including discretionary services such as obesity programmes).
- The Health and Social Care Act 2012 gives the Secretary of State power to publish guidance to which local authorities must have regard. The intention is to use this power to require local authorities to have regard to the Public Health Outcomes Framework. The new Public Health Outcomes Framework for England 2013–2016 includes two outcome indicators on excess weight prevalence in children and adults, to measure progress locally and nationally.
- Each director of public health reports annually on the health of the local population. Guidance from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence says that directors of public health should also establish local targets and indicators including short and immediate measures, alongside defining long-term goals.
- The directors of public health can ensure that, depending on local needs, multiple agencies across the community are involved in tackling obesity. Action can also be aligned with other disease specific prevention strategies, such as initiatives to prevent type 2 diabetes. The director of public health will be able to work with local clinical commissioning groups to ensure a coherent approach to tackling obesity which spans both prevention and treatment.
- The Department will set the public health outcomes framework and will incentivise achieving certain national priorities through the health premium incentive. However, there will be no centrally imposed targets, and no performance management of local authorities by the centre. Local authorities will determine their priorities, according to the needs of their population.
- Health and wellbeing boards in every upper-tier local authority provide a forum for councillors, the director of public health, the director of children’s services, the director of adult social services, representatives from clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) and local Healthwatch to assess local needs through Joint Strategic Needs Assessments. Health and wellbeing boards will develop Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategies based on those identified needs.
- Joint Strategic Needs Assessments and Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategies will inform local commissioning plans for health, public health and social care; and could possibly be used to inform the commissioning of health-related services.
Local government is playing a lead role in driving health improvement and harnessing partners at local level with the freedom to determine the local approaches which work best for local people and for specific population groups facing the greatest challenges (with the Government monitoring and rewarding progress against outcomes, and not process). Local government is leading efforts to support individuals in achieving and maintaining a healthy weight, through: • Harnessing its reach – excess weight has many causes, and at the same time the types of action that can help to prevent it can bring wider benefits. Local government is ideally placed to lead on developing comprehensive local strategies on overweight and obesity, involving core prevention and treatment measures. It is also well placed to harness the potential of a wide range of other instruments, including: synergies with sustainable transport plans; application of planning rules to benefit healthier lifestyles; use of green spaces and other opportunities for physical activity and sport; healthier catering provision in local authority and education premises; and bringing influence to bear on the local out-of-home catering sector. • Bringing together a local coalition of partners – supporting health and wellbeing boards to operate effectively and a wide range of partners from the public, private and voluntary and community sectors so that tackling obesity is genuinely seen as ‘everybody’s business’. • Commissioning a comprehensive and integrated range of interventions – the need is for a spectrum of interventions, from purely preventive, through brief advice on weight loss, through to weight management services and ultimately surgery, commissioned and provided in an integrated way which makes efficient use of different routes into support and different kinds of provision, backed by an agreed local pathway. The opportunity will be for local government to work seamlessly with local clinical commissioning groups and (where appropriate) the NHs Commissioning Board to build on excellent examples of good practice so that the best becomes the universal. |
+Citations (1) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Healthy Lives, Healthy People: A call to action on obesity in England
Author: Department of Health Publication info: 2011 October 13 Cited by: David Price 4:23 PM 28 December 2014 GMT
Citerank: (16) 340964Tackling obesity in the UKWith concern growing that the Foresight analysis—that 50% of the UK population could be obese by 2050, at an annual cost to the nation of around £50 billion per year [2]—substantially underestimates the scale of the unfolding obesity crisis, the College of Contemporary Health is working with the wider policy community to develop a whole systems map of the obesity crisis and the potential responses.7F1CEB7, 348688Impacts of obesityObesity presents a significant threat to the health of the UK population and a significant drain on the nation's financial resources. 24.9% of adults in England are obese—with a body mass index of over 30—62% of adults are either overweight or obese (with a BMI of over 25), and 32% of 10–11-year-olds are overweight or obese. The annual cost of obesity to the UK is estimated to be £27bn–£46bn [1], [2]; although international comparisons suggest that the true cost could be significantly higher.57DE7179, 348776A profound impact on the health of the populationObesity is responsible for more than 9,000 premature deaths each year in England, reduces life expectancy on average by nine years, and is a major risk factor in wide range of serious health problems including Type 2 diabetes (5 x), cancer (3 x the risk of colon cancer), and heart disease (2.5 x).57DE7179, 348780Causes of obesityUnderstanding the causes of obesity is critical to the success of prevention and treatment strategies. However, while (simply put) obesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the body’s metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period (resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat), in reality many complex behavioural and societal factors contribute systemically to the current crisis and no single influence dominates.555CD992, 348780Causes of obesityUnderstanding the causes of obesity is critical to the success of prevention and treatment strategies. However, while (simply put) obesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the body’s metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period (resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat), in reality many complex behavioural and societal factors contribute systemically to the current crisis and no single influence dominates.555CD992, 352281Changes required across many different policy areasObesity has to be seen as not just a technical, food, physical activity or healthcare problem but a challenge for what sort of society is being built. Small, incremental, publicity-driven (i.e. social market-based) changes might suit the existing balance of policy interests, but a more extensive, co-ordinated, cross-sectoral action would be more effective.1198CE71, 352311Lost productivityObesity has as a serious impact on UK economic development – constraining economic productivity and increasing business costs – affecting individuals’ ability to get and hold down work, their self-esteem and their underlying mental health.57DE7179, 352312Target interventions across the whole course of lifeTackling obesity effectively requires the adoption of a life course approach – from pre-conception through pregnancy, infancy, early years, childhood, adolescence and teenage years, and through to adulthood and preparing for older age. There are specific opportunities and challenges at each stage of the life course and action is needed at all ages to avert the short- and long-term consequences of excess weight and to ensure that health inequalities are addressed. 565CA4D9, 352314Actions – Central Government2794CAE1, 399558Changes required across many different policy areasObesity has to be seen as not just a technical, food, physical activity or healthcare problem but a challenge for what sort of society is being built. Small, incremental, publicity-driven (i.e. social market-based) changes might suit the existing balance of policy interests, but a more extensive, co-ordinated, cross-sectoral action would be more effective.1198CE71, 399559Target interventions across the whole course of lifeTackling obesity effectively requires the adoption of a life course approach – from pre-conception through pregnancy, infancy, early years, childhood, adolescence and teenage years, and through to adulthood and preparing for older age. There are specific opportunities and challenges at each stage of the life course and action is needed at all ages to avert the short- and long-term consequences of excess weight and to ensure that health inequalities are addressed. 565CA4D9, 399887Causes of obesityUnderstanding the causes of obesity is critical to the success of prevention and treatment strategies. However, while (simply put) obesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the body’s metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period (resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat), in reality many complex behavioural and societal factors contribute systemically to the current crisis and no single influence dominates.555CD992, 399887Causes of obesityUnderstanding the causes of obesity is critical to the success of prevention and treatment strategies. However, while (simply put) obesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the body’s metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period (resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat), in reality many complex behavioural and societal factors contribute systemically to the current crisis and no single influence dominates.555CD992, 399972Impacts of obesityObesity presents a significant threat to the health of the UK population and a significant drain on the nation's financial resources. 23% of adults are obese—with a body mass index of over 30—61% of adults are either overweight or obese (with a BMI of over 25), and 33% of 10–11-year-olds are overweight or obese. The annual cost of obesity to the UK economy has been estimated to be £27bn–£46bn [1], [2]; although international comparisons suggest that the true cost could be significantly higher.57DE7179, 399974A profound impact on the health of the populationObesity is responsible for more than 9,000 premature deaths each year in England, reduces life expectancy on average by nine years, and is a major risk factor in wide range of serious health problems including Type 2 diabetes (5 x), cancer (3 x the risk of colon cancer), and heart disease (2.5 x).57DE7179, 400018Lost productivityObesity has as a serious impact on UK economic development – constraining economic productivity and increasing business costs – affecting individuals’ ability to get and hold down work, their self-esteem and their underlying mental health.57DE7179 URL:
| Excerpt / Summary This document sets out how the new approach to public health will enable effective action on obesity and encourages a wide range of partners to play their part. |
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