Family Medicine Publications

Authors

Jürgen M Steinacker
Willem van Mechelen
Wilhelm Bloch
Mats Börjesson
Maurizio Casasco
Bernd Wolfarth
Carolin Knoke
Theodora Papadopoulou
Janine Wendt
Hashel Al Tunaiji
Dietrich Andresen
Olena Andrieieva
Norbert Bachl
Victoriya Badtieva
Friedhelm J Beucher
Cheri A Blauwet
Jose-Antonio Casajus Mallen
Ju-Ho Chang
German Clénin
Naama Constantini
Demitri Constantinou
Luigi Di Luigi
Lukas Declercq
Stephane Doutreleau
Svitlana Drozdovska
Martine Duclos
Andrea Ermolao
Thomas Fischbach
Anastasia N Fischer
Chiara Fossati
Jeorge Franchella
Mark Fulcher
Jan C Galle
Christian Gerloff
Evelina Georgiades
Boris Gojanovic
Marcela González Gross
Andy Grote
Martin Halle
Hans Hauner
Matthew Payton Herring
Mikio Hiura
Kerstin Holze
Gerhard Huber
David Hughes
Mark R Hutchinson
Anca Ionescu
Dina Christina Janse van Rensburg
Anna Jegier
Natasha Jones
Kirsten Kappert-Gonther
Monika Kellerer
Yutaka Kimura
Agrita Kiopa
Bernd Kladny
Gerhard Koch
Elin Kolle
Greg Kolt
Yiannis Koutedakis
Stephan Kress
Susi Kriemler
Jens Kröger
Christian Kuhn
Roman Laszlo
Ralph Lehnert
François J Lhuissier
Kerstin Lüdtke
Shigeru Makita
Pedro Manonelles Marqueta
Winfried März
Kirill Micallef-Stafrace
Mike Miller
Melita Moore
Erich Müller
Daniel Neunhäuserer
I Renay Onur
Vahur Ööpik
Malgorzata Perl
Anastassios Philippou
Hans-Georg Predel
Sebastien Racinais
Algirdas Raslanas
Ruediger Reer
Klaus Reinhardt
Claus Reinsberger
Sandra Rozenstoka
Robert Sallis
Luis B Sardinha
Martin Scherer
Jasper Schipperijn
Romain Seil
Benedict Tan
Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss
Nils Schumacher
Bernhard Schwaab
Ansgar Schwirtz
Masato Suzuki
Jeroen Swart
Ralph Tiesler
Ulf Tippelt
Eleanor Tillet
Jane Thornton
Bulent Ulkar
Eve Unt
Evert Verhagen
Thomas Weikert
Roberto Vettor
Sheng Zeng
Richard Budgett
Lars Engebretsen
Ugur Erdener
Fabio Pigozzi
Yannis P Pitsiladis

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-27-2023

Journal

BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine

Volume

9

Issue

3

First Page

001626

Last Page

001626

URL with Digital Object Identifier

10.1136/bmjsem-2023-001626

Abstract

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, dementia, depression and cancers, are on the rise worldwide and are often associated with a lack of physical activity (PA). Globally, the levels of PA among individuals are below WHO recommendations. A lack of PA can increase morbidity and mortality, worsen the quality of life and increase the economic burden on individuals and society. In response to this trend, numerous organisations came together under one umbrella in Hamburg, Germany, in April 2021 and signed the 'Hamburg Declaration'. This represented an international commitment to take all necessary actions to increase PA and improve the health of individuals to entire communities. Individuals and organisations are working together as the 'Global Alliance for the Promotion of Physical Activity' to drive long-term individual and population-wide behaviour change by collaborating with all stakeholders in the community: active hospitals, physical activity specialists, community services and healthcare providers, all achieving sustainable health goals for their patients/clients. The 'Hamburg Declaration' calls on national and international policymakers to take concrete action to promote daily PA and exercise at a population level and in healthcare settings.

Find in your library

Share

COinS