Physical Activity Policy and Program Development: The Experience in Finland

This article describes the development of sports and physical activity policies and programs in Finland during the past 30 years. The past two decades have been marked by a shift in emphasis from competitive and elite sports to health-enhancing physical activity for all, as seen most clearly in two...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public health reports (1974) 2004-05, Vol.119 (3), p.331-345
Hauptverfasser: Vuori, Ilkka, Lankenau, Becky, Pratt, Michael
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container_title Public health reports (1974)
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creator Vuori, Ilkka
Lankenau, Becky
Pratt, Michael
description This article describes the development of sports and physical activity policies and programs in Finland during the past 30 years. The past two decades have been marked by a shift in emphasis from competitive and elite sports to health-enhancing physical activity for all, as seen most clearly in two successive sports acts and a government resolution. The new, increasingly multisectoral policies have led to substantial changes in the public funding of sports organizations, services, and construction of sports sites. Furthermore, three successive five-year national physical activity promotion programs have been launched. As a result, increased and new types of opportunities to participate in physical activity have become available, and the infrastructure and networks for provision of services have been strengthend. Until the mid 1990s, leisure time physical activity increased in Finland, but during the last seven to eight years, both leisure time and commuting physical activity have been stable. This finding may be an indication of the difficulty to increase physical activity in an industrialized country with already relatively high levels of physical activity even when systematic, long-term policies and measures are applied.
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The past two decades have been marked by a shift in emphasis from competitive and elite sports to health-enhancing physical activity for all, as seen most clearly in two successive sports acts and a government resolution. The new, increasingly multisectoral policies have led to substantial changes in the public funding of sports organizations, services, and construction of sports sites. Furthermore, three successive five-year national physical activity promotion programs have been launched. As a result, increased and new types of opportunities to participate in physical activity have become available, and the infrastructure and networks for provision of services have been strengthend. Until the mid 1990s, leisure time physical activity increased in Finland, but during the last seven to eight years, both leisure time and commuting physical activity have been stable. 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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Exercise
Finland
Funding
Health care policy
Health Policy
Health promotion
Humans
Leisure time
Medical sciences
Men
Miscellaneous
Population growth
Practice Articles
Program Development
Program Evaluation
Public health
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Public policy
Recommendations
Sports
Walking
Wellbeing
title Physical Activity Policy and Program Development: The Experience in Finland
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