Title: Increasing Physical Activity in the Workplace
1Increasing Physical Activity in the Workplace
Cari Browning, CTRS/CHES Physical Activity
Coordinator Texas Department of State Health
Services
2Before we begin
- I represent employees that work mostly in
- Administrative service
- people work in office/on computers/in meetings
- Direct Service
- People report on location/their jobs may be
demanding, they may work directly with clients,
and they may be active/moving around all day - Field Work
- People are rarely in office/the telecommute or
are regional - Manual Labor
- Peoples jobs include walking, bending, lifting,
pushing etc
3During this presentation we will
- Briefly review what physical activity in the
workplace means, why we focus on PA at the
workplace and discuss the best way to effectively
increase physical activity at work - Participate in an activity/discussion to
determine activities relative to your work
environment and introduce you to others working
in the same type of environment - Discuss evidence-based and best practice
strategies for physical activity in the workplace
(PSE) -
-
4What does Physical Activity in the workplace
mean?
5What does Physical Activityin the workplace mean?
- It means that our goal is to
- Create a culture that supports active living
- Reduce sedentary behavior
- Provide opportunities for people to move
(mod/vigorous PA for 10min bouts and up)
6Physical Activity (PA) Guidelines
- Adults
- 150 minutes (2.5 hours) per week
moderate-intensity aerobic PA - OR
- 75 minutes (1.25 hours) per week
vigorous-intensity aerobic PA - OR
- Equivalent combination MVPA
- Moderate-high intensity muscle-strengthening PA
at least twice a week (all major muscle groups)
7Why? Our employer supports our health See
HB1297
8Why? Because its an effective public health
strategy
- People spend a lot of time at work!
- We have opportunity to support adults to be
physically active on the way to work, at work,
and after work - Work is a place of social influence,
communication and information sharing
9Physical Activity levels explained
Physical activity Any bodily movement that
results in energy expenditure. Exercise
Planned, structured, and repetitive physical
activity designed to target a particular outcome
(such as physical fitness).
10What exercise at work may look like
11Ways to increase activity at work
12To effectively increase physical activity at
work Do this
- Build support and find champions
- Assess resources, survey staff and inform
- Complete PA assessment
- Survey your staff
- Explore resources
- Implement, monitor, evaluate and inform
- Understand the Diffusion of Innovation Theory
13KEY RESOURCE!
- Step 1 Build Support
- Step 2 Plan and Assess
- Step 3 Promote
- Step 4 Implement
- Step 5 Evaluate
- Step 6 Share Results
- Step 7 Sustain
http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/hwi/toolkits/pa-t
oolkit.htm
Also look at http//www.cdc.gov/nationalhealt
hyworksite/join/toolkit.html
14TRIVIA TIME
- How should we increase opportunities for physical
activity and reduce sedentary behavior in the
workplace?
- Create programs and challenges at work that will
encourage staff to be active - Get leadership support for employees to be active
and have their support demonstrated in policies,
procedures and practice (i.e.- flex time to
exercise) - Put information about PA in a newsletter, hang
information around the building and create tag
lines for people to put in email - Have onsite facilities for exercise with locker
rooms and showers and/or discounted opportunities
for people to workout outside of work
15Think PSE for Physical Activity
Policy 1. a course or principle of action
adopted or proposed by a government, party,
business, or individual
System 1. a set of connected things or parts
forming a complex whole, in particular. 2. a set
of principles or procedures according to which
something is done an organized scheme or method
Environment 1. the surroundings or conditions
in which a person, animal, or plant lives or
operates.
16What is policy and who creates policies?
- Policies
- Are laws, regulations, rules, protocols, and
procedures designed to guide or influence
behavior - Can either be legislative or organizational in
nature - Often mandate environmental changes and increase
the likelihood that they will become
institutionalized or sustainable
17What is a system? Who influences systems at
work?
- Systems
- Impact all elements, including social norms of an
organization, institution, or system -
- May include a policy or environmental change
strategy - Policies are often the driving force behind
systems change
18What does the environment at work have to do
with people being active?
- Environments
- encompass physical, social, or economic factors
designed to influence peoples practices and
behaviors. Examples - Physical Structural changes or the presence of
programs or services, including improvements in
the built environment to promote walking (e.g.,
walking paths). - Social Attitudes or behavior about policies that
promote health or an increase in supportive
attitudes regarding a health practice, including
an increase in acceptance of physical activity
and nonacceptance of sedentary behavior at the
workplace.
19TRIVIA TIME
- Identify these the policy, system and environment
activities below. - Create programs and challenges at work that will
encourage staff to be active - Get leadership support for employees to be active
and have their support demonstrated in policies,
procedures and practice (i.e.- flex time to
exercise) - Put information about PA in a newsletter, hang
information around the building and create tag
lines for people to put in email - Have onsite facilities for exercise with locker
rooms and showers and/or discounted opportunities
for people to workout outside of work
20PSE examples
- It may be easier than you think!!
21State Employees Health Fitnessand Education
HB1297
- Sec. 664.061. AGENCY WELLNESS POLICIES. A state
agency may - (1) allow each employee 30 minutes during
normal working hours for exercise three times
each week - (2) allow all employees to attend on-site
wellness seminars when offered and - (3) provide eight hours of additional leave
time each year to an employee who - (A) receives a physical examination and
- (B) completes either an online health risk
assessment tool provided by the board or a
similar health risk assessment conducted in
person by a worksite wellness coordinator. - Added by Acts 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., Ch. 665,
Sec. 4, eff. September 1, 2007. - For full text of HB1297 and Section 664, see
www.wellness.state.tx.us/HB1297Lt.pdf
22State Employees Health Fitnessand
Education HB1297
- Sec. 664.053. CREATION OF MODEL PROGRAM
- The wellness program may include
- 4) the development and promotion of
environmental change strategies that integrate
healthy behaviors and physical activity,
including recommending healthy food choices in
snack bars, vending machines, and state-run
cafeterias located in state buildings and - (5) optional incentives to encourage
participation in the wellness program, including
providing flexibility in employee scheduling to
allow for physical activity and participation in
the wellness program - Added by Acts 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., Ch. 665,
Sec. 4, eff. September 1, 2007. - For full text of HB1297 and Section 664, see
www.wellness.state.tx.us/HB1297Lt.pdf
23Policy and procedure improvements
- Meeting protocol
- Permission/Freedom to stand at meetings
- Implement activity breaks for meetings more than
one hour - Walking meetings
24Policy and procedure improvements
- Approve sit/stand workstations
- Provide flexible work arrangements or break times
for physical activity (we would for PT!)
25Policy and procedure improvements
- Consider resources around and in your office that
can support people to be active and aware of a
culture of health - Joint Use Agreements
- Work with internal or external partners to
provide exercise classes on site (before, after,
or during work) - Work with community groups and partners to use
trails or facilities to increase usage and
awareness - Subsidize transportation options
26System change and improvements
- Consider how people get to work and around town
after work - Encourage use of non-motorized vehicles
(walk/bike) to location - Alter rewards using carrot and stick method
- Biking/Walking verse Driving
27Systems change and improvements
- Consider systems during work
- Encourage moving breaks and people to bring
exercise equipment to work (hand weights etc.) - Support employees, clubs or groups to encourage
physical activity among employees - Provide a series of educational seminars,
workshops or classes on physical activity
28Systems change and improvements
- Consider systems after work
- Provide access to offsite workout facility or
subsidizing cost - Provide direct support (i.e. money, land,
pavilion, recreation facilities, sponsorship,
advertising) for supporting community-wide
physical activity opportunities (sports teams,
walking clubs)
29Environmental Changes/Improvements
- What environmental changes can promote physical
activity? - Point-of-Decision Prompts
- http//www.eatsmartmovemorenc.com/Worksites/Toolki
t/WsTk_MoveMore.html
- Promote stairwell use
- StairWELL to better health
- http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/hwi/toolkits/stai
rwell/index.htm
30Environmental Changes/Improvements
- What environmental changes can promote physical
activity? - Space for exercise/access to onsite fitness
center or gym - lockers/showers
- Trails/maps (time and distance)
- Safe area for people to be active (lighting,
signage, crime watch)
31Environmental Changes/Improvements
- What environmental changes canpromote physical
activity? - Enhance access to public transportation
- Bike racks/shelter
32What can you do at your location? And how will
you roll it out using PSE?
- LOW RESOURCES
- Company culture
- Flexible work hours
- Organized physical activity breaks
- Map out on-site trails or nearby walking routes
- Walk-and-talk meetings
- Stand up desks
- Post motivational signs at elevators to encourage
stair use. - Provide bicycle racks.
- MEDIUM RESOURCES
- Shower and/or changing facilities
- Outdoor exercise areas such as fields and trails.
- Recreation leagues and other physical activity
events - Employee activity clubs (e.g., walking,
bicycling). - Discounted memberships at local health clubs,
YMCAs - Incentive programs such as pedometer walking
challenges. - HIGH RESOURCES
33Resources
- OUR MANDATE
- For full text of HB1297 and Section 664, see
www.wellness.state.tx.us/HB1297Lt.pdf - A Case for Physical Activity Document
www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/hwi/downloads/Steps2Well
ness_the_case_for_phys_act.pdf - PROCESS
- Steps to Wellness A guide to implementing the
2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans
in the Workplace http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/
hwi/toolkits/pa-toolkit.htm - ASSESSMENT
- NHW assessment http//www.cdc.gov/nationalhealthyw
orksite/docs/Worksite_Health_Intervention_Strategi
es_508.pdf - www.cdc.gov/WorkplaceHealthPromotion
- CDC Worksite Scorecard- PA pages 22-23
http//www.cdc.gov/dhdsp/pubs/docs/HSC_Manual.pdf - Walkability Assessment http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/
dnpao/hwi/toolkits/walkability/index.htm - PHYSICAL ACTIVITY EVIDENCE BASED AND BEST
PRACTICE RESOURCES - CDC/NHW main page http//www.cdc.gov/nationalhealt
hyworksite/index.html - Stairwell info http//www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpao/hw
i/toolkits/stairwell/other_ideas.htm - Wellness Toolkit with Point of decision prompts-
ready to use http//www.eatsmartmovemorenc.com/NCH
ealthSmartTlkt/WorksiteTlkt.html - How to lead a walking meeting
- http//www.feetfirst.org/walk-and-maps/walking-mee
tings - http//news.stanford.edu/news/2014/april/walking-v
s-sitting-042414.html - Stand up workstation information
http//blogs.cdc.gov/niosh-science-blog/2012/12/05
/sit-stand - Neuhaus, M., Eakin, E. G., Straker, L., Owen, N.,
Dunstan, D. W., Reid, N. and Healy, G. N. (2014),
Reducing occupational sedentary time a
systematic review and meta-analysis of evidence
on activity-permissive workstations. Obesity
Reviews, 15 822838. doi 10.1111/obr.12201
34Questions?
35Thank You!
Cari Browning, CTRS/CHES Physical Activity
Coordinator Primary Prevention Branch (512)
776-2610 cari.browning_at_dshs.state.tx.us