More High Peak children getting recommended amount of exercise than before the pandemic

More children in the High Peak hit the recommended amount of exercise last year than before the coronavirus pandemic, new figures show.
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But just under half of children in England met the Chief Medical Officers’ guidelines of an hour or more of exercise a day, which Sport England said demonstrates the "challenge facing our country".

Figures from the organisation’s annual Active Lives survey found 52% of children and young people in the High Peak were classed as 'active' – meeting the recommended amount of activity – in the 2022-23 academic year. It was down from 56% the previous academic year, but above pre-pandemic levels in 2017-18 when 39% of children were active.

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Of the area's 1,236 respondents last year, 21% were classed as 'fairly active' – meaning they did between 30 minutes to an hour of activity per day – while 27% did less than half an hour of exercise a day.

Figures from the organisation’s annual Active Lives survey found 52% of children and young people in High Peak were classed as 'active' – meeting the recommended amount of activity – in the 2022-23 academic year.Figures from the organisation’s annual Active Lives survey found 52% of children and young people in High Peak were classed as 'active' – meeting the recommended amount of activity – in the 2022-23 academic year.
Figures from the organisation’s annual Active Lives survey found 52% of children and young people in High Peak were classed as 'active' – meeting the recommended amount of activity – in the 2022-23 academic year.

Across England, 47% of young people were active for an average of 60 minutes a day in the recent academic year. It is roughly the same proportion as the year before, but up from 43% in 2017-18 when the survey began.

Tim Hollingsworth, chief executive of Sport England, said while the figures reveal some positives, they indicate more work must be done to get children and young people active.

He added: "The fact that fewer than half are meeting the Chief Medical Officers’ guidelines demonstrates the scale of challenge facing our country. Too many children and young people are missing out on the benefits of living an active life – to their physical health but also mental well-being and positive social connection with friends and their community."

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The figures also show 1.5 million – or 33% of – children and young people volunteered to support sport and physical activity nationally, though this was down from 38% in 2017-18. In High Peak, 34% of children volunteered at least twice last year.

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Sports Minister Stuart Andrew said: "This underlines the need for more action – and greater concerted focus across government departments, as well as across the sport and physical activity sector. We welcome the launch of the new Physical Activity Taskforce, which meets next week, as a chance for this action to be debated."

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