Early bird
tickets
available now!
GET HCM
magazine
Sign up for the FREE digital edition of HCM magazine and also get the HCM ezine and breaking news email alerts.
Not right now, thanksclose this window I've already subscribed!
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Follow Health Club Management on Twitter Like Health Club Management on Facebook Join the discussion with Health Club Management on LinkedIn
FITNESS, HEALTH, WELLNESS

features

Interview: Gareth Presch

The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) founder talks to Kate Cracknell about his ambition to achieve good health for all via a global knowledge-sharing platform

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2019 issue 6
Gareth Presch
Gareth Presch
WHIS is a preventative healthcare platform, which empowers people to improve their health and wellbeing by facilitating community engagement

What’s your background?
I’m from Dublin, Ireland, and have worked in the health system for 20 years. I’m grateful to the Irish Health Service because it gave me a fantastic education that allowed me to progress through the ranks. I’m not a clinician, but work well with clinicians – I understand what they need (time to treat) – and moved through the system, working in areas such as community care, health promotion and acute hospitals. My last role was chief officer of the National Haemophilia Council.

How did WHIS come about?
My family and I left Ireland just over five years ago, moving to Cumbria, and I joined the NHS. I was shocked to see the pressures on the system and the consequent staff retention issues – people were constantly leaving.

My ethos is one of consistent, high-quality patient-centred care, and you’re simply not going to deliver that if you’re losing staff on a continuous basis. You’ll also struggle to attract good people in the first place. I wanted to help Cumbria with its problems around recruiting and retaining staff.

People attract people, so I came up with the idea of a platform – which I called the World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) – designed to attract thought leaders to Cumbria. The thinking was that we’d support them in disseminating their knowledge through the platform and peer-reviewed journals, and that in turn would attract good staff, showcasing it as a great place to live, work and invest.

That was the initial concept for WHIS, which we launched in 2015. However, very quickly after our first event we realised there was a lot more to it. There are so many challenges facing the health service: rising levels of obesity and other lifestyle diseases, and an ageing population, all set against a projected shortfall of 18 million healthcare workers globally by 2030 (source: BMJ). We realised WHIS had the chance to become a global preventative healthcare platform, supporting people around the world in improving their health and wellbeing.

So, what is WHIS now?
WHIS has evolved into precisely this preventative healthcare platform. It aims to empower people to improve their health and wellbeing by facilitating effective community engagement. It’s a preventative healthcare platform for patients, clinicians, managers, the voluntary sector, education and the business community. It’s open and transparent and deliberately brings together people from other industries whose new ideas and different perspectives create new opportunities. It supports collaboration and breaks down silo working.

We’re a social enterprise: we aim to generate income and reinvest money and value generated from our programmes back into the local communities where we work.

Our model is based on combining human, social and intellectual capital: a knowledge transfer platform that exists to support the NHS and other health economies globally.

We run events that attract people to a city, and we bring in experts to share their knowledge – people of influence who attract key decisionmakers. For example, we brought Roland Schatz, the special advisor to the UN director general, to Cumbria to discuss investment opportunities and job creation. When you bring in such people, that creates business opportunities. Our events and activities have boosted the local economy and created new jobs and opportunities for the region.

We also create programmes that organisations can tap into [see below], and we can help those who have a good idea themselves to get it off the ground. In turn, they can affiliate themselves with WHIS and use our platform to access the marketplace; we want to develop WHIS as a quality assurance mark for products and services which are available through the platform.

WHIS makes knowledge and good ideas globally scaleable. All the great social prescribing programmes that are already out there can be shared. All the products and services related to health and wellbeing suddenly have a means to elevate what they do. WHIS can take something from being a local initiative to having worldwide reach.

What initiatives has WHIS been involved in so far?
We’ve held summits and activities in cities across the UK, as well as in places such as Thailand and Greece. Meanwhile, our programmes and wellness activities have been tested in Cumbria.
One of our big success stories has been WHISKids – a programme for schools that focuses predominantly on mental health and wellbeing. We support children with physical and emotional wellbeing advice and explain the importance of a balanced diet and being active. We’ve had a couple of thousand children go through the programme in Cumbria over the last couple of years and the results are impressive: kids experience an average 20 per cent increase in their mental wellbeing as a result.

Other programmes include WHISAtwork (stress management in the workplace) and WHISSeniors (falls prevention, quality of life and loneliness prevention).

We’re also collaborating to develop new programmes, including a cancer wellbeing programme and a global pregnancy wellbeing programme that’s based on health education, health promotion and disease prevention. These will have a positive effect on people and communities over the short, medium and long term, and would never have happened without the WHIS platform.

How’s it all funded?
Some of our events require delegates to purchase tickets; others have sponsors. Companies can also exhibit at those events. Organisations also pay to use our programmes: schools pay to use WHISKids, for example. Once overheads are covered, the profits are reinvested back into the community.

Other programmes might be funded: for example, the cancer programmes we’ve run so far have been funded through Macmillan and NHS Cumbria. Funding is out there, provided you’re able to bring and develop value.

But ultimately, our business model is based on generating value and sharing it through a circular economy: we provide services, partnerships, sponsorships, CSR, impact investing and so on, and can be commissioned to deliver large-scale projects.

An independent report demonstrated that every £1 invested in our activities generates £36 in terms of social return on investment. We can stand up and say: ‘You give us £1m and we’ll generate £36m back to your local economy.’ What mayor around the world is not going to want that sort of social return on investment?

Importantly, everything we do can be done in any community by them joining the WHIS federation. They write to us, outline their plans, and we share our experiences with them and help them adopt the WHIS model.

WHIS is a platform that supports people and communities taking positive action and our ultimate objective is to improve people’s health and wellbeing while creating a new ecosystem through a circular economy.

You’re involved in the UN’s SDG Cities project. Tell us more about that?
The SDG 25 + 5 Cities Leadership platform is a very ambitious programme led by the UN and run through a foundation. At its heart are 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs), including no poverty, zero hunger, good health and wellbeing, quality education, climate action, clean water and sanitation and so on.

The project has identified 25 cities and five indigenous communities around the world to become lighthouses, where experts in their field will come together and help those cities deliver the sustainable development goals by 2025.

In this project, I’m involved as an individual expert rather than specifically representing WHIS. My area of focus is SDG 3: good health and wellbeing. We’ll be working with institutions, universities and city councils in the 25 cities to identify ways to implement the sustainable development goals and raising funding through the foundation via impact investing.

How can the physical activity sector collaborate with WHIS and SDG Cities?
Physical activity will play a huge part in all of our WHIS and SDG3 programmes: we disseminate information about healthy living and welcome support and knowledge sharing.

I see huge scope for collaboration with the physical activity sector. I believe we can work together to create a new ecosystem that supports community wellbeing, and that’s also great for the local economy and local job creation. This is an opportunity to develop a strategy with long-term benefits.

Initiatives such as Parkrun, for example, could go into every one of our cities. We also plan to work with hoteliers, health and wellness clubs and so on as part of the Sustainable Development Goals ‘Cities’ initiative.

In addition to the 25 cities, we’re also setting up what we’re calling Hubs – cities that will become incubators for new ideas and new programmes that – once prototyped and proven – can be rolled out to the 25. We plan to bring in leading experts to work with us on creating these solutions, and we’ll work with city officials to test them. As part of that, we want to develop next generation health and wellbeing centres, offering a mix of clinical, physical and emotional wellbeing services.

There are clear opportunities to partner with WHIS and SDG to develop solutions to support communities. We’re looking to work with like-minded businesses that share the same values.

Where do you see WHIS in the next 5-10 years?
WHIS will become the world’s leading platform for health and wellbeing, as it can be shared and scaled to support any community and bring value. We’re already engaged in the UAE, Thailand, Nigeria, Kenya, Switzerland and the US.

We’ve built WHIS on trust and it grows by attracting people who understand what we do is for the common good. We provide the methodology and the value proposition. They take ownership and generate the income.

Our support for the SDG Cities programme also presents opportunities. I’m due to meet with the Pope in June, for example, and work closely with the EU and governments around the world to implement SDG goals. There are over 100 million people living in cities on the SDG platform, and there’s funding to invest in initiatives that have been proven to work. WHIS is a front-runner with the opportunity to scale up its operations.

What’s your ultimate goal for WHIS?
To support a new, preventative model of wellness, health and social care. We share knowledge as a way of empowering local people to improve their health and wellbeing.

We believe we have to take action so our kids can grow up in a world in which we can all thrive. We can’t solve all society’s challenges immediately, but we believe good health is a common denominator: if you’re healthy, fit and well, you’re more likely to be contributing positively to society.

We want to move from a gig economy to a knowledge economy, with a circular model that leaves no-one behind.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Presch is getting support from governments and agencies and is meeting the Pope and his team in June
Presch is getting support from governments and agencies and is meeting the Pope and his team in June
Presch wants to work with the health and fitness and activity sectors
Presch wants to work with the health and fitness and activity sectors
Programmes include WHISSeniors, which offers fall prevention
Programmes include WHISSeniors, which offers fall prevention
WHISKids is a programme for schools that focuses on mental health and wellbeing / shutterstock
WHISKids is a programme for schools that focuses on mental health and wellbeing / shutterstock
The Cumbria team. From Left - Dr Neela Shabde, Krista Presch, Gareth Presch, Ken Herd and Dr Poonam Malik
The Cumbria team. From Left - Dr Neela Shabde, Krista Presch, Gareth Presch, Ken Herd and Dr Poonam Malik
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/imagesX/248624_202597.jpg
The founder of the World Health Innovation Summit explains his vision for achieving a fit and healthy planet by using a global knowledge-sharing platform
Gareth Presch, founder, The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) ,Gareth Presch,The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS), Irish Health Service, community care, health promotion, acute hospitals, WHISKids,
HCM magazine
Weight loss drugs are altering consumer behaviour, disrupting sectors from food retailing (smaller portions) to apparel (less fabric needed). We need to move fast to align with this new reality
HCM magazine
A new study has found major differences in the way males and females utilise fat during exercise, as Kath Hudson reports
HCM magazine
As the UK healthcare sector struggles with ever-increasing demand, health club operators are stepping in and offering members welcome medical support. Kath Hudson reports
HCM magazine
HCM People

Jonny Wilkinson

Founder, One Living
When you follow things intuitively you realise you’re being guided, but I was never listening to that
HCM magazine
Dr Tim Anstiss is developing coachbots that are supporting positive behaviour change for operators such as Life Leisure and KA Leisure
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Since EGYM launched at Vivacity, the team has onboarded more than 1,200 members, with a retention rate of 85%
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Green Gym Group partnered with Xplor Gym for an all-in-one gym management software solution to save time and improve the member experience
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
At the heart of the Sydney Swans new headquarters in Australia is an elite player-focused training facility by strength equipment specialist BLK BOX
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
We all know we need to stand more. Now an exciting new partnership between Physical and Teca Fitness expands this thinking into UK gyms and beyond
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
A major refurbishment of Sport Ireland Fitness by Technogym has created a world-class public gym at the home of Irish sport
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Life Fitness has reimagined cardio with the launch of its Symbio line which has been designed with advanced biomechanics and offers deep levels of customisation
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Sustainability in the fitness industry is coming on in leaps and bounds as more operators refurbish their gym equipment to save money and the planet
HCM promotional features
Sponsored
Coaching workshops from Keith Smith and Adam Daniel have been designed to empower your team and transform your service
HCM promotional features
Latest News
FitnessKPI has closed an investment round for more €1 million that will help it accelerate ...
Latest News
With the 2024 Paris Games about to begin, GLL is celebrating the fact that 94 ...
Latest News
Sector leaders in the UK have collaborated to create the Physical Activity Leadership Network that ...
Latest News
Female health expert, The Well HQ has teamed up with training provider, The Fitness Group, ...
Latest News
Fitness-focused hospitality brand and management company Equinox Hotels has announced plans to open a modern ...
Latest News
Finalists for the UK Active Awards 2024 have been announced. Winners from across the 14 ...
Latest News
Midlands-based boutique operator, MK Health Hub, has launched a Pilates-inspired concept called MK Reformed, with ...
Latest News
US health and fitness giant, Planet Fitness, which flagged plans to launch in Spain back ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Altrafit introduces custom functional fitness equipment at Third Space
Altrafit has taken further steps to cement its reputation as a provider of high-quality, affordable functional fitness equipment that is built to last with the development and introduction of a new functional fitness keg for luxury gym operator, Third Space.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: THFI’s new online coaching course partners with FITR: launch your business confidently post-completion
In today's rapidly evolving fitness industry, where many online courses promise secret formulas for entrepreneurial success, the reality is that few provide the necessary knowledge to thrive in this fast-changing profession.
Company profiles
Company profile: Serco Leisure
Serco Leisure Operating Limited is one of the UK’s leading national operators of leisure centres, ...
Company profiles
Company profile: TVS Group
The TVS Group supply and install sports and fitness flooring to a wide range of ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier showcase - Safe Space: Delivering the vision
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Innerva press release: Active Lifestyle Centres launches second assisted wellbeing and fitness centre
£140K Thornbury Wellbeing Studio addresses needs of local ageing population
Featured press releases
Places Leisure press release: Parkinson’s UK and Places Leisure announce physical activity pilot
Parkinson’s UK and Places Leisure have agreed a new programme of tailored sessions to help more people living with Parkinson’s to get active and live well with the condition.
Directory
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
Salt therapy products
Himalayan Source: Salt therapy products
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Property & Tenders
Jersey
Jersey War Tunnels
Property & Tenders
Chiswick, Gillingham, York and Nottingham
Savills
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
08-10 Sep 2024
Wyndham® Lake Buena Vista Disney Springs™ Resort, Lake Buena Vista, United States
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
20-22 Sep 2024
Locations worldwide,
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
09-13 Oct 2024
Soneva Fushi, Maldives
Diary dates
10 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London,
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-06 Feb 2025
Coventry Building Society Arena, Coventry, United Kingdom
Diary dates
11-13 Feb 2025
Fairmont Riyadh , Saudi Arabia
Diary dates
10-13 Apr 2025
Exhibition Centre , Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
07-07 Jun 2025
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
28-31 Oct 2025
Koelnmesse, Cologne, Germany
Diary dates

features

Interview: Gareth Presch

The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) founder talks to Kate Cracknell about his ambition to achieve good health for all via a global knowledge-sharing platform

By Kate Cracknell | Published in Health Club Management 2019 issue 6
Gareth Presch
Gareth Presch
WHIS is a preventative healthcare platform, which empowers people to improve their health and wellbeing by facilitating community engagement

What’s your background?
I’m from Dublin, Ireland, and have worked in the health system for 20 years. I’m grateful to the Irish Health Service because it gave me a fantastic education that allowed me to progress through the ranks. I’m not a clinician, but work well with clinicians – I understand what they need (time to treat) – and moved through the system, working in areas such as community care, health promotion and acute hospitals. My last role was chief officer of the National Haemophilia Council.

How did WHIS come about?
My family and I left Ireland just over five years ago, moving to Cumbria, and I joined the NHS. I was shocked to see the pressures on the system and the consequent staff retention issues – people were constantly leaving.

My ethos is one of consistent, high-quality patient-centred care, and you’re simply not going to deliver that if you’re losing staff on a continuous basis. You’ll also struggle to attract good people in the first place. I wanted to help Cumbria with its problems around recruiting and retaining staff.

People attract people, so I came up with the idea of a platform – which I called the World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) – designed to attract thought leaders to Cumbria. The thinking was that we’d support them in disseminating their knowledge through the platform and peer-reviewed journals, and that in turn would attract good staff, showcasing it as a great place to live, work and invest.

That was the initial concept for WHIS, which we launched in 2015. However, very quickly after our first event we realised there was a lot more to it. There are so many challenges facing the health service: rising levels of obesity and other lifestyle diseases, and an ageing population, all set against a projected shortfall of 18 million healthcare workers globally by 2030 (source: BMJ). We realised WHIS had the chance to become a global preventative healthcare platform, supporting people around the world in improving their health and wellbeing.

So, what is WHIS now?
WHIS has evolved into precisely this preventative healthcare platform. It aims to empower people to improve their health and wellbeing by facilitating effective community engagement. It’s a preventative healthcare platform for patients, clinicians, managers, the voluntary sector, education and the business community. It’s open and transparent and deliberately brings together people from other industries whose new ideas and different perspectives create new opportunities. It supports collaboration and breaks down silo working.

We’re a social enterprise: we aim to generate income and reinvest money and value generated from our programmes back into the local communities where we work.

Our model is based on combining human, social and intellectual capital: a knowledge transfer platform that exists to support the NHS and other health economies globally.

We run events that attract people to a city, and we bring in experts to share their knowledge – people of influence who attract key decisionmakers. For example, we brought Roland Schatz, the special advisor to the UN director general, to Cumbria to discuss investment opportunities and job creation. When you bring in such people, that creates business opportunities. Our events and activities have boosted the local economy and created new jobs and opportunities for the region.

We also create programmes that organisations can tap into [see below], and we can help those who have a good idea themselves to get it off the ground. In turn, they can affiliate themselves with WHIS and use our platform to access the marketplace; we want to develop WHIS as a quality assurance mark for products and services which are available through the platform.

WHIS makes knowledge and good ideas globally scaleable. All the great social prescribing programmes that are already out there can be shared. All the products and services related to health and wellbeing suddenly have a means to elevate what they do. WHIS can take something from being a local initiative to having worldwide reach.

What initiatives has WHIS been involved in so far?
We’ve held summits and activities in cities across the UK, as well as in places such as Thailand and Greece. Meanwhile, our programmes and wellness activities have been tested in Cumbria.
One of our big success stories has been WHISKids – a programme for schools that focuses predominantly on mental health and wellbeing. We support children with physical and emotional wellbeing advice and explain the importance of a balanced diet and being active. We’ve had a couple of thousand children go through the programme in Cumbria over the last couple of years and the results are impressive: kids experience an average 20 per cent increase in their mental wellbeing as a result.

Other programmes include WHISAtwork (stress management in the workplace) and WHISSeniors (falls prevention, quality of life and loneliness prevention).

We’re also collaborating to develop new programmes, including a cancer wellbeing programme and a global pregnancy wellbeing programme that’s based on health education, health promotion and disease prevention. These will have a positive effect on people and communities over the short, medium and long term, and would never have happened without the WHIS platform.

How’s it all funded?
Some of our events require delegates to purchase tickets; others have sponsors. Companies can also exhibit at those events. Organisations also pay to use our programmes: schools pay to use WHISKids, for example. Once overheads are covered, the profits are reinvested back into the community.

Other programmes might be funded: for example, the cancer programmes we’ve run so far have been funded through Macmillan and NHS Cumbria. Funding is out there, provided you’re able to bring and develop value.

But ultimately, our business model is based on generating value and sharing it through a circular economy: we provide services, partnerships, sponsorships, CSR, impact investing and so on, and can be commissioned to deliver large-scale projects.

An independent report demonstrated that every £1 invested in our activities generates £36 in terms of social return on investment. We can stand up and say: ‘You give us £1m and we’ll generate £36m back to your local economy.’ What mayor around the world is not going to want that sort of social return on investment?

Importantly, everything we do can be done in any community by them joining the WHIS federation. They write to us, outline their plans, and we share our experiences with them and help them adopt the WHIS model.

WHIS is a platform that supports people and communities taking positive action and our ultimate objective is to improve people’s health and wellbeing while creating a new ecosystem through a circular economy.

You’re involved in the UN’s SDG Cities project. Tell us more about that?
The SDG 25 + 5 Cities Leadership platform is a very ambitious programme led by the UN and run through a foundation. At its heart are 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs), including no poverty, zero hunger, good health and wellbeing, quality education, climate action, clean water and sanitation and so on.

The project has identified 25 cities and five indigenous communities around the world to become lighthouses, where experts in their field will come together and help those cities deliver the sustainable development goals by 2025.

In this project, I’m involved as an individual expert rather than specifically representing WHIS. My area of focus is SDG 3: good health and wellbeing. We’ll be working with institutions, universities and city councils in the 25 cities to identify ways to implement the sustainable development goals and raising funding through the foundation via impact investing.

How can the physical activity sector collaborate with WHIS and SDG Cities?
Physical activity will play a huge part in all of our WHIS and SDG3 programmes: we disseminate information about healthy living and welcome support and knowledge sharing.

I see huge scope for collaboration with the physical activity sector. I believe we can work together to create a new ecosystem that supports community wellbeing, and that’s also great for the local economy and local job creation. This is an opportunity to develop a strategy with long-term benefits.

Initiatives such as Parkrun, for example, could go into every one of our cities. We also plan to work with hoteliers, health and wellness clubs and so on as part of the Sustainable Development Goals ‘Cities’ initiative.

In addition to the 25 cities, we’re also setting up what we’re calling Hubs – cities that will become incubators for new ideas and new programmes that – once prototyped and proven – can be rolled out to the 25. We plan to bring in leading experts to work with us on creating these solutions, and we’ll work with city officials to test them. As part of that, we want to develop next generation health and wellbeing centres, offering a mix of clinical, physical and emotional wellbeing services.

There are clear opportunities to partner with WHIS and SDG to develop solutions to support communities. We’re looking to work with like-minded businesses that share the same values.

Where do you see WHIS in the next 5-10 years?
WHIS will become the world’s leading platform for health and wellbeing, as it can be shared and scaled to support any community and bring value. We’re already engaged in the UAE, Thailand, Nigeria, Kenya, Switzerland and the US.

We’ve built WHIS on trust and it grows by attracting people who understand what we do is for the common good. We provide the methodology and the value proposition. They take ownership and generate the income.

Our support for the SDG Cities programme also presents opportunities. I’m due to meet with the Pope in June, for example, and work closely with the EU and governments around the world to implement SDG goals. There are over 100 million people living in cities on the SDG platform, and there’s funding to invest in initiatives that have been proven to work. WHIS is a front-runner with the opportunity to scale up its operations.

What’s your ultimate goal for WHIS?
To support a new, preventative model of wellness, health and social care. We share knowledge as a way of empowering local people to improve their health and wellbeing.

We believe we have to take action so our kids can grow up in a world in which we can all thrive. We can’t solve all society’s challenges immediately, but we believe good health is a common denominator: if you’re healthy, fit and well, you’re more likely to be contributing positively to society.

We want to move from a gig economy to a knowledge economy, with a circular model that leaves no-one behind.

Sign up here to get HCM's weekly ezine and every issue of HCM magazine free on digital.
Presch is getting support from governments and agencies and is meeting the Pope and his team in June
Presch is getting support from governments and agencies and is meeting the Pope and his team in June
Presch wants to work with the health and fitness and activity sectors
Presch wants to work with the health and fitness and activity sectors
Programmes include WHISSeniors, which offers fall prevention
Programmes include WHISSeniors, which offers fall prevention
WHISKids is a programme for schools that focuses on mental health and wellbeing / shutterstock
WHISKids is a programme for schools that focuses on mental health and wellbeing / shutterstock
The Cumbria team. From Left - Dr Neela Shabde, Krista Presch, Gareth Presch, Ken Herd and Dr Poonam Malik
The Cumbria team. From Left - Dr Neela Shabde, Krista Presch, Gareth Presch, Ken Herd and Dr Poonam Malik
https://www.leisureopportunities.co.uk/images/imagesX/248624_202597.jpg
The founder of the World Health Innovation Summit explains his vision for achieving a fit and healthy planet by using a global knowledge-sharing platform
Gareth Presch, founder, The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS) ,Gareth Presch,The World Health Innovation Summit (WHIS), Irish Health Service, community care, health promotion, acute hospitals, WHISKids,
Latest News
FitnessKPI has closed an investment round for more €1 million that will help it accelerate ...
Latest News
With the 2024 Paris Games about to begin, GLL is celebrating the fact that 94 ...
Latest News
Sector leaders in the UK have collaborated to create the Physical Activity Leadership Network that ...
Latest News
Female health expert, The Well HQ has teamed up with training provider, The Fitness Group, ...
Latest News
Fitness-focused hospitality brand and management company Equinox Hotels has announced plans to open a modern ...
Latest News
Finalists for the UK Active Awards 2024 have been announced. Winners from across the 14 ...
Latest News
Midlands-based boutique operator, MK Health Hub, has launched a Pilates-inspired concept called MK Reformed, with ...
Latest News
US health and fitness giant, Planet Fitness, which flagged plans to launch in Spain back ...
Latest News
Urban Gym Group CEO Neil Randall talks in this month’s HCM about how being passed ...
Latest News
Boxing and strength franchise UBX has taken a step closer to realising its ambitions to ...
Latest News
Fitness International has announced the acquisition of XSport Fitness, adding to its portfolio of brands, ...
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: Altrafit introduces custom functional fitness equipment at Third Space
Altrafit has taken further steps to cement its reputation as a provider of high-quality, affordable functional fitness equipment that is built to last with the development and introduction of a new functional fitness keg for luxury gym operator, Third Space.
Featured supplier news
Featured supplier news: THFI’s new online coaching course partners with FITR: launch your business confidently post-completion
In today's rapidly evolving fitness industry, where many online courses promise secret formulas for entrepreneurial success, the reality is that few provide the necessary knowledge to thrive in this fast-changing profession.
Company profiles
Company profile: Serco Leisure
Serco Leisure Operating Limited is one of the UK’s leading national operators of leisure centres, ...
Company profiles
Company profile: TVS Group
The TVS Group supply and install sports and fitness flooring to a wide range of ...
Supplier Showcases
Supplier showcase - Safe Space: Delivering the vision
Catalogue Gallery
Click on a catalogue to view it online
Featured press releases
Innerva press release: Active Lifestyle Centres launches second assisted wellbeing and fitness centre
£140K Thornbury Wellbeing Studio addresses needs of local ageing population
Featured press releases
Places Leisure press release: Parkinson’s UK and Places Leisure announce physical activity pilot
Parkinson’s UK and Places Leisure have agreed a new programme of tailored sessions to help more people living with Parkinson’s to get active and live well with the condition.
Directory
Flooring
Total Vibration Solutions / TVS Sports Surfaces: Flooring
Snowroom
TechnoAlpin SpA: Snowroom
Salt therapy products
Himalayan Source: Salt therapy products
Lockers
Crown Sports Lockers: Lockers
Spa software
SpaBooker: Spa software
Cryotherapy
Art of Cryo: Cryotherapy
Property & Tenders
Jersey
Jersey War Tunnels
Property & Tenders
Chiswick, Gillingham, York and Nottingham
Savills
Property & Tenders
Diary dates
03-05 Sep 2024
IMPACT Exhibition Center, Bangkok, Thailand
Diary dates
08-10 Sep 2024
Wyndham® Lake Buena Vista Disney Springs™ Resort, Lake Buena Vista, United States
Diary dates
19-19 Sep 2024
The Salil Hotel Riverside - Bangkok, Bangkok 10120, Thailand
Diary dates
20-22 Sep 2024
Locations worldwide,
Diary dates
01-04 Oct 2024
REVĪVŌ Wellness Resort Nusa Dua Bali, Kabupaten Badung, Indonesia
Diary dates
09-13 Oct 2024
Soneva Fushi, Maldives
Diary dates
10 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London,
Diary dates
22-25 Oct 2024
Messe Stuttgart, Germany
Diary dates
24-24 Oct 2024
QEII Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-07 Nov 2024
In person, St Andrews, United Kingdom
Diary dates
04-06 Feb 2025
Coventry Building Society Arena, Coventry, United Kingdom
Diary dates
11-13 Feb 2025
Fairmont Riyadh , Saudi Arabia
Diary dates
10-13 Apr 2025
Exhibition Centre , Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
07-07 Jun 2025
Worldwide, Various,
Diary dates
28-31 Oct 2025
Koelnmesse, Cologne, Germany
Diary dates
Search news, features & products:
Find a supplier:
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
The Leisure Media Company Ltd
Partner sites