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@BrentToderian The approaches endorsed by Lancet/ British Medical Journal are in line with GAPPA’s policy recommendations. World Health Organization. Global Action Plan on Physical Activity 2018–2030: more active people for a healthier world. Geneva World Health Organization; 2018. #UrbanDesign #DesignForFitness #Health
https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/272722
Global action plan on physical activity 2018–2030: more active people for a healthier world

@BrentToderian research summaries published by Lancet / British Medical Journal series on physical activity advocate for prioritising environmental over individual approaches for physical activity promotion, and that ‘mega-trends’, such as important economic, societal, environmental and policy changes, have profound impacts on population health and offer opportunities for mobilising populations for positive changes. #UrbanDesign #DesignForFitness #Health
https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/54/8/462
Towards better evidence-informed global action: lessons learnt from the Lancet series and recent developments in physical activity and public health

In the past few decades, the field of physical activity has grown and evolved in scope, depth, visibility and impact around the world. Global progress has been observed in research and practice in physical activity regarding surveillance, health outcomes, correlates/determinants, interventions, translation and policy. The 2012 and 2016 Lancet series on physical activity provide some of the most comprehensive global analysis on various topics within physical activity. Based on the Lancet series and other key developments in the field, literature searches, and expert group meetings and consultation, we provide a global summary on the progress of, gaps in and future directions for physical activity research in the following areas: (1) surveillance and trends, (2) correlates and determinants, (3) health outcomes and (4) interventions, programmes and policies. Besides lessons learnt within each specific area, several recommendations are shared across areas of research, including improvement in measurement, applying a global perspective with a growing emphasis on low-income and middle-income countries, improving inclusiveness and equity in research, making translation an integral part of research for real-world impact, taking an ‘upstream’ public health approach, and working across disciplines and sectors to co-design research and co-create solutions. We have summarised lessons learnt and recommendations for future research as ‘roadmaps’ in progress to encourage moving the field of physical activity towards achieving population-level impact globally.

British Journal of Sports Medicine