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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 15 November 2018

15 Nov 2018 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Physical Activity, Diet and Healthy Weight

This Government has made it clear that it wants a fairer Scotland where everyone thrives. In moving the motion, I make the point that our overall aim is to improve the health of the nation, and preventing ill health and reducing health inequalities are central to achieving that.

In June, we published a set of six interlinked public health priorities, each with prevention and early intervention at its core. They cover places and communities; the early years; mental wellbeing; alcohol, tobacco and drugs; poverty; and healthy weight and physical activity. Those priorities, which were agreed between the Government and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, are the most important issues to focus on, over the next decade, to improve the health of the people of Scotland.

Today I will outline the step changes that the Government is taking to meet one of those public health priorities: a Scotland where we all eat well and have a healthy weight and level of physical activity. In July, we published two complementary delivery plans that set out what needs to be done to achieve that priority. We recognise that the plans sit alongside a wide range of Government policy and action. Each delivery plan has stretching ambitions: we want to cut physical inactivity in adults and teenagers by 15 per cent by 2030, in line with the new global goal that was set out by the World Health Organization; we want to halve childhood obesity by 2030; and we want to significantly reduce diet-related health inequalities.

We have set a high bar, and rightly so. The scale of the challenge is huge and the inequalities remain persistently wide. The ambitions are underpinned by clear and comprehensive plans. I welcome support from across the chamber in addressing those twin challenges. We need to take decisive action, including restricting junk food promotions and helping more women and girls to get involved in sport and physical activities.

Let us remind ourselves why we need to act so urgently. We all know that being physically active is one of the best things that we can do for our overall physical and mental wellbeing. An active lifestyle can help to prevent heart disease, strokes, type 2 diabetes, musculoskeletal conditions and a number of cancers, but it is about more than that. Physical activity has a unique power to inspire and motivate us. It can also play a crucial role in tackling social isolation and developing confidence. In short, being active is about all of us enjoying healthy lives and being connected to our communities and our environment.

Overall levels of physical activity in Scotland remain steady, while other developing countries show decline. Given its many benefits, we want to go further and see those levels increase.

The case for change is even more stark when it comes to diet and healthy weight. We should be in no doubt about the scale of the challenge. We are consistently failing to meet our dietary goals: 65 per cent of adults are overweight or obese and over a quarter—26 per cent—of children are at risk of being overweight or obese. That is a shocking statistic, particularly given that overweight children are more likely to become overweight adults, with all the health inequality that that brings.

Obesity is the second-biggest preventable cause of cancer after smoking. It is the most significant risk factor for type 2 diabetes and it can also increase the risk of lots of conditions, including cardiovascular diseases and arthritis. If we can bring down the rates of obesity and drive up the rates of physical activity, we can prevent the burden of health harms on our children, on adults and on the national health service, and the people of Scotland will live longer, healthier and happier lives.

Both plans have three core priorities. They seek to address health inequalities by supporting everyone to have active lifestyles and healthy diets, they recognise the importance of collective leadership and broad ownership nationally and locally, across the public, private, third and community sectors, and they prioritise cross-portfolio approaches to ensure that policies across the Government—not just in the health portfolio—support the changes that are needed. Let me turn to the detail in each of the plans.

In July, I launched “A More Active Scotland: Scotland’s Physical Activity Delivery Plan”, which sets out a range of 90 actions that we and our delivery partners are taking to encourage and support people in Scotland to be more active more often. Partnership working is a central theme. Our plan follows the publication of the WHO’s “Global action plan on physical activity 2018–2030”. The WHO plan sets the challenges that countries around the world face in helping people to get and stay active. It highlights how so many aspects of modern life, including transport, technology and changes in work and leisure activities lead us towards inactivity. The WHO plan makes it clear that a whole-system approach is crucial to success. That means working across policy boundaries to improve education, transport, health, planning and sport sectors, among others.

I am extremely pleased that the WHO has welcomed our delivery plan and that it sees Scotland as being ahead of the game in responding to its global action plan.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani) SNP
The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-14749, in the name of Joe FitzPatrick, on physical activity, diet and healthy weight. I ask members who w...
The Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing (Joe FitzPatrick) SNP
This Government has made it clear that it wants a fairer Scotland where everyone thrives. In moving the motion, I make the point that our overall aim is to i...
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con) Con
In Edinburgh, the Scottish National Party and Labour Party controlled city council is looking to hike up prices for local groups that undertake sports in spo...
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
Local government is one of our partners in what we are trying to do. I was pleased when City of Edinburgh Council said that it would look again at those matt...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Will you formally move your motion, please, minister?
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
I moved it in my very first sentence.
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Did you? I was not listening closely enough. I am very sorry.
Joe FitzPatrick SNP
I move, That the Parliament welcomes the publication of two new delivery plans for Scotland, which set out ambitious actions to increase levels of physical ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
I call Brian Whittle to move amendment S5M-14749.1 and to speak to it for no more than eight minutes, please. 15:23
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
I welcome the opportunity to open on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives and thank the Scottish Government for the opportunity to debate this important topi...
David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab) Lab
I welcome this afternoon’s debate. Obesity is a modern-day public health crisis that would have been unrecognisable to Scots who lived through rationing in t...
Brian Whittle Con
I mentioned to the member last night, in discussing preventable health issues, that I read in a magazine that parental physical activity has a huge impact on...
David Stewart Lab
I bow to the member’s experience. He makes a very good point that was reinforced at the diabetes dinner last night. I agree with what the Government has do...
Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green) Green
I would like to thank the many organisations that have provided briefings for this afternoon’s debate. I, too, am glad to discuss the systemic change that we...
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP) SNP
I agree with what the member is saying, but does she agree that, sometimes, healthier food can be cheaper than takeaway food, which is expensive, and that an...
Alison Johnstone Green
The member makes an interesting point, but we also have to remember that in some parts of our more deprived communities we have what are described as food de...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
On days such as this, when there are tectonic shifts in politics, both at Westminster and across Europe, it is possible that outside observers might see deba...
Bruce Crawford (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
The Scottish Government motion that we are debating today sets out the benefits of improved physical activity and healthy eating. A healthier lifestyle can b...
Annabelle Ewing (Cowdenbeath) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Bruce Crawford SNP
Only if the member is going to serve me macaroni and cheese.
Annabelle Ewing SNP
I am curious, now that Bruce Crawford has raised the matter: did he have macaroni cheese for lunch?
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Excuse me, Mr Crawford; I put on record that I did not take chips.
Bruce Crawford SNP
I did not have it, but only because I did not spot that it was on. It is one of my favourites. There is a place for it. We should not decry that as not being...
Liz Smith (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
I warmly congratulate the member who has just spoken, not just because of the wonderful Munros in Stirlingshire, which I have had the privilege of climbing—s...
Alex Cole-Hamilton LD
Does the member agree that as well as improving food in school canteens, we need to educate children about the journey that the foodstuffs that they ingest a...
Liz Smith Con
Absolutely—I agree. That is all part of the educational journey for youngsters. However, the key thing is that we must ensure that there is an improvement in...
Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP) SNP
I very much welcome the fact that Philip Sim is watching the debate, because I know how much he enjoys my contributions. I say to Bruce Crawford that, in 194...
David Stewart Lab
Will the member give way?
Stewart Stevenson SNP
That is all that people need to survive, although the experiment reported that there was a substantial increase in flatulence. Speaking of which, I will give...
David Stewart Lab
What was the member’s experience of living through the Boer war?