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Planning and implementing a nationwide football-based health-education programme
  1. Jiri Dvorak,
  2. Colin W Fuller,
  3. Astrid Junge
  1. FIFA Medical Assessment and Research Centre, Zurich, Switzerland
  1. Correspondence to Jiri Dvorak, FIFA Medical Assessment and Research Centre, FIFA-Strasse 20, PO Box 8044, Zurich, Switzerland; jiri.dvorak{at}fifa.org

Abstract

Communicable and non-communicable diseases place enormous social and economic burdens on developed and developing countries. Health education leading to changes in people's attitudes and behaviours remains the best approach for reducing the problem of communicable diseases while there is evidence that programmes providing regular physical exercise and advocating a controlled diet can reduce the prevalence of many non-communicable diseases. Hence, the delivery of health education and physical activity within a single coherent programme offers great potential for simultaneously addressing both health issues. Since 2006, FIFA has developed and tested a novel football-based health-education programme for children entitled ‘11 for Health’, which is aimed at increasing children's levels of physical activity while also delivering 11 simple health messages. When new interventions of this type are published in the scientific literature, it is often not possible to describe important background information about the project that could assist other researchers in developing and implementing similar programmes. This paper attempts to bridge this gap by describing the aims and objectives, organisation, planning, implementation and monitoring requirements needed to deliver FIFA's ‘11 for Health’ programme, first as a pilot project and subsequently as a nationwide project, through a tripartite arrangement between FIFA, the national Football Association and the Government Ministries in Mauritius.

This paper is freely available online under the BMJ Journals unlocked scheme, see http://bjsm.bmj.com/info/unlocked.dtl

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Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.