Exercise should be considered a core treatment for arthritis
Exercise should be considered as a core treatment for those suffering from arthritis caused by wear-and-tear.
New draft guidelines, published for the UK's National Health Service (NHS) by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), state that physical activity can ease pain and help individuals with osteoarthritis stay healthy.
The guidance recommends offering tailored therapeutic exercise to all people with osteoarthritis, specifically identifying local muscle strengthening and general aerobic fitness exercises as particularly effective.
A key to the success of physical activity was not simply to get people – and joints – moving, but the positive effect that exercise can have on arthritis sufferers who are overweight.
According to NICE, evidence generally shows that, for people with knee osteoarthritis, as weight loss increases, the benefits for quality of life, pain and physical function increase.
In its guidance to NHS healthcare workers and practitioners, NICE recommends that any prescribing of exercise should be accompanied by an explanation that physical activity might at first be painful – but that "it is worth it".
The guidance states: "Advise people with osteoarthritis that joint pain may increase when they start therapeutic exercise.
"Explain that doing regular and consistent exercise, even though this may initially cause discomfort, will be beneficial for their joints – and that long-term adherence to exercise increases its benefits."
To read the full NICE guidance, click here.

Swim Teacher
Customer Service Advisor
Swim Teacher
Activity and Wellbeing Instructor
Operations Manager - Brentwood School Enterprises
Fitness Manager
Swim Teacher
GP Exercise Referral Instructor
Duty Manager
Duty Manager
Duty Manager
Recreation Assistant (Dry Site)
Team Leader (Dry Site)
Community Activator Coach Apprentice
Company profile
Directory
Featured Supplier
Property & Tenders
Company: Lee Valley Regional Park Authority
Company: Newmark
Company: EiA Real Estate
Company: Savills
Company: University of Oxford







