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Health Watch: Age is just a number, seniors redefine fitness and community

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Health Watch: Age is just a number, seniors redefine fitness and community

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – When you picture a fitness class, you might imagine a room full of young, energetic participants, but at BFit and Well in Anchorage, the scene looks a little different.

The 55-and-older crowd is proving that staying active isn’t just for the young — it’s for anyone ready to prioritize their health and well-being.

On a typical Tuesday morning, the energy in the gym is palpable. Owner and fitness enthusiast Bonnie Murphy, 79, leads the charge, encouraging her senior fitness class with motivational words.

For Bonnie, this has been a passion project for nearly two decades.

“When they get confidence, all of a sudden they’re different,” Bonnie shared. “They can do things and they, like go with their family on vacations and stuff, where before they were afraid of falling or afraid of, you know, losing their balance or something.”

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BFit and Well offers more than strength and balance exercises — it provides a sense of belonging, according to members. For Brian Milbrett, who joined six years ago after retiring, the gym became a haven.

“It’s a great place to go,” he said. “You’ve got really good people that you work with, and Bonnie’s excellent.”

Members at BFit and Well using battle ropes during a morning class.(Alaska’s News Source)

The benefits of senior fitness extend far beyond the physical. Member Sharon Frascati notes how exercise uplifts her emotionally, particularly during Alaska’s long winters.

“It clears your mind,” Frascati explained. “If you’re stressed, if you’re depressed, if you’re — you know, in Alaska, we have the SAD [Seasonal Affective Disorder]. You know, a lot of people get that, and I think it just boosts your whole emotional and mental and physical well-being.”

Kathy Jones, a member since 2015, emphasized the importance of staying active to combat the natural effects of aging.

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“We lose muscle mass and bone density and so on as we age, so anything you can do to prevent that is great,” Jones said.

From light weights to cardio circuits, Bonnie tailors the workouts to meet members where they are, ensuring safety and accessibility for all.

“At our age, things are not as flexible as they once were, and we’re more prone to injuries,” Sandi Bentz said. “If we’re not careful, we can be injured and then working out is no longer an option.

“I just love it that everything is done according to how what our abilities are,” she added.

The takeaway? It’s never too late to start moving and feeling your best.

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“I don’t feel any older than I did when I started,” Bonnie said with a smile as she got ready for her next class.

BFit and Well also offers Rock Steady Boxing classes for individuals with Parkinson’s disease, further emphasizing its commitment to holistic health for all ages and an option for those looking into senior fitness.

See a spelling or grammar error? Report it to web@ktuu.com

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World Fitness Bodies Release Study Supporting Exercise’s Impact on GLP-1s

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World Fitness Bodies Release Study Supporting Exercise’s Impact on GLP-1s
Fitness trade organizations from the U.S., U.K., Australia, New Zealand and Canada collaborated on a study revealing numerous benefits of an integrated care model that combines weight-loss drugs with exercise, especially strength training

Major international health and fitness organizations have joined forces to study the long-term impact exercise can have on GLP-1 users, with the findings showing optimistic results.

The white paper, which emerged from the collaboration of trade organizations including the U.S.-based Health & Fitness Association, U.K.-based ukactive, Australia-based AUSactive, Exercise New Zealand and Fitness Industry Council of Canada, finds that pairing GLP-1 therapy with regular structured exercise has multiple downstream benefits. Those include improved long-term health outcomes, reduced subsequent costs and positive economic returns across multiple countries.

The study dove into whether structured exercise can improve the long-term clinical and economic value of GLP-1 treatment by comparing the impacts of GLP-1 therapy as a standalone obesity treatment versus GLP-1 therapy combined with exercise, utilizing a health-economic model across Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the U.K. and the U.S.

The financial component of the study found:

  • U.K.: £2.7 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 164% return on investment, rising to 717% and £13 billion over 30 years.
  • U.S.: $120 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 496% return on investment, rising to 1,572% and $393 billion over 30 years.
  • Australia: AU$182 million in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 59% return on investment, rising to 457% and AU$1.4 billion over 30 years.
  • Canada: CA$3.5 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 105% return on investment, rising to 526% and CA $17.9 billion over 30 years.
  • New Zealand: NZ$51 million in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 27% return on investment, rising to 306% and NZ$592 million over 30 years.

Meanwhile, the addition of structured exercise to a GLP-1 treatment plan had numerous positive health impacts, including:

  • Preserving muscle during weight loss
  • Maintaining strength, mobility and bone health
  • Keeping more weight off over time
  • Reducing weight regain after stopping medication
  • Lowering the risk of costly health events later on.

Additionally, the paper highlighted a reduction in acute cardiovascular events and joint replacements; improved patient longevity and quality of life; and reduced spending on medical costs and productivity losses.

Based on those results, the bodies are once again urging for the deeper integration of physical activity and strength training in GLP-1 treatment, after releasing a statement earlier this year calling on governments, health systems and international institutions to ensure that as drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy continue to dominate obesity treatment, they’re supported by lifestyle interventions including physical activity and nutrition.

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“GLP-1 medications are rapidly changing obesity treatment, but weight loss alone is not the full measure of success,” said HFA president and interim CEO Greta Wagner. 

From those results, the bodies have come up with a plan for how best to implement fitness-forward practices into a systemic treatment plan for GLP-1 users. They propose the following roadmap for policymakers, payers and healthcare systems:

  1. Recognise structured exercise, especially strength training, as an essential part of obesity care
  2. Embed exercise support into GLP-1 care models
  3. Build referral pathways between healthcare providers and qualified exercise professionals and fitness facilities
  4. Support patient access to qualified exercise professionals and fitness facilities
  5. Measure outcomes beyond weight loss, including long-term health and economic value.

The organizations also suggested policy shifts such as reimbursement, coverage, tax-preferred treatment or subsidy models that lower financial barriers to structured exercise for GLP-1 users, making exercise more widely recognized as a crucial component of GLP-1 therapy.

“The health and fitness industry has long known that lasting wellness requires more than a number on a scale, it requires strength, function and sustainable healthy life habits,” Wagner added. “This research confirms that exercise, especially strength training, helps patients sustain the benefits of GLP-1 treatment over time. It sends a clear message that exercise belongs at the center of GLP-1 care.”

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Adding Exercise to GLP‑1 Therapy Improves Long-Term Benefits, Multinational Study Finds – Health & Fitness Association

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Adding Exercise to GLP‑1 Therapy Improves Long-Term Benefits, Multinational Study Finds – Health & Fitness Association

The combination could save billions in healthcare costs, leading fitness organizations to call for deeper integration of structured exercise in GLP-1 treatment.

Pairing GLP-1 therapy with regular structured exercise would improve long-term health outcomes, reduce downstream costs, and generate positive economic returns across multiple countries, according to new multinational research by the Health & Fitness Association developed by FTI Consulting’s Center for Healthcare Economics and Policy. 

Released as a white paper entitled From Weight Loss to Lasting Value: Structured Exercise and the Economics of GLP-1 Therapy, the research compares impacts of GLP-1 therapy as a standalone obesity treatment with GLP-1 therapy combined with exercise in five countries. 

The research was developed in collaboration with the HFA Foundation and four fitness industry federations: AUSactive, Exercise New Zealand, Fitness Industry Council of Canada, and ukactive.

The white paper provides some of the strongest evidence to date that exercise significantly enhances the value of GLP-1 treatment for patients, healthcare systems, employers, and society as a whole.

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Across all five countries studied, the analysis found that a combined approach supports improved long-term health outcomes, reduced healthcare costs, and produced positive economic returns.

Combining regular exercise with GLP-1 therapy is estimated to generate:

  • United States: US$120 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 496% return on investment, rising to 1,572% and US$393 billion over 30 years.
  • Australia: A$182 million in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 59% return on investment, rising to 457% and A$1.4 billion over 30 years.
  • Canada: C$3.5 billion in economic and societal  value over 10 years and a 105% return on investment, rising to 526% and C$17.9 billion over 30 years.
  • New Zealand: NZ$51 million in economic and societal  value over 10 years and a 27% return on investment, rising to 306% and NZ$592 million over 30 years.
  • United Kingdom: £2.7 billion in economic and societal  value over 10 years and a 164% return on investment, rising to 717% and £13 billion over 30 years.

The findings demonstrate that as GLP-1 use expands, exercise should play an essential role in helping patients and health systems maximize the long-term value from new generations of weight-loss drugs.

The fitness industry has an unprecedented opportunity to be part of the solution as GLP-1 usage continues to grow. 

“GLP-1 medications are rapidly changing obesity treatment, but weight loss alone is not the full measure of success,” says Greta Wagner, interim president and CEO of the Health & Fitness Association and president of the HFA Foundation. “The health and fitness industry has long known that lasting wellness requires more than a number on a scale; it requires strength, function, and sustainable healthy life habits. This research confirms that exercise, especially strength training, helps patients sustain the benefits of GLP-1 treatment over time. It sends a clear message that exercise belongs at the center of GLP-1 care.”

Based on this data, HFA, HFA Foundation, AUSactive, Exercise New Zealand, Fitness Industry Council of Canada, and ukactive are calling on policymakers, payers, and healthcare systems to integrate structured exercise into GLP-1 treatment pathways. 

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Specifically, the groups are asking that: 

  1. Structured exercise, including strength training, be recognized as an essential part of obesity care;
  2. GLP-1 care models include exercise support;
  3. Referral pathways are established between healthcare providers and qualified exercise professionals;
  4. Patient access to qualified exercise professionals and fitness facilities be supported; and
  5. Outcomes beyond weight loss be measured, including long-term health and economic value.

This call to action builds on a recent joint position statement signed by the participating fitness industry groups, the World Obesity Federation (WOF), and the World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry (WFSGI), which emphasized the urgency of ensuring physical activity and nutrition are central to systems supporting the global roll-out of obesity medications. 

Download the complimentary full report to see how structured exercise can help unlock the full promise of GLP-1 therapy.

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From Weight Loss to Lasting Value: Structured Exercise and the Economics of GLP-1 Therapy – Health & Fitness Association

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From Weight Loss to Lasting Value: Structured Exercise and the Economics of GLP-1 Therapy – Health & Fitness Association

This white paper is complimentary.

GLP-1 medications are reshaping obesity care and creating new opportunities to improve long-term health outcomes. But weight loss alone is not the full measure of success. As use of these medications grows, policymakers, payers, healthcare providers, and patients face an important question: what helps ensure that the benefits of GLP-1 therapy are sustained over time?

This first-of-its kind multi-country research examines the health and economic value of combining GLP-1 therapy with structured exercise. The findings make clear that structured exercise help protect and extend the investment being made in GLP-1 treatment by supporting more sustainable health outcomes, reducing costly downstream medical events, and generating substantial economic value.

Across all five studied markets, the research projects that combining structured exercise with GLP-1 therapy can generate substantial health, economic, and societal value compared with GLP-1 therapy alone:

  • United States: US$120 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 496% return on investment, rising to 1,572% and US$393 billion over 30 years.
  • Australia: A$182 million in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 59% return on investment, rising to 457% and A$1.4 billion over 30 years.
  • Canada: C$3.5 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 105% return on investment, rising to 526% and C$17.9 billion over 30 years.
  • New Zealand: NZ$51 million in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 27% return on investment, rising to 306% and NZ$592 million over 30 years.
  • United Kingdom: £2.7 billion in economic and societal value over 10 years and a 164% return on investment, rising to 717% and £13 billion over 30 years.

If public and private payers are investing in GLP-1 therapy, they should also be asking what helps that investment produce more sustainable health and economic returns. Structured exercise is one of the clearest answers.

Methodology

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The research was conducted by by FTI Consulting’s Center for Healthcare Economics and Policy in partnership with a multinational coalition of fitness sector organizations, including the Health & Fitness Association, the HFA Foundation, AUSactive, Exercise New Zealand, Fitness Industry Council of Canada, and ukactive. 

Drawing on the existing body of research on GLP-1 therapy, weight loss, physical activity, and related health outcomes, the analysis modeled the incremental health and economic impact of adding structured exercise to GLP-1 therapy across participating markets. The model compares combined treatment against GLP-1 therapy alone over 10-year and 30-year horizons.

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