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Chris Boardman calls for free bikes on the NHS

"If people want to ride bikes, get everything out of their way and we’re all going to benefit."...

Bikes should be available for free on the NHS for overweight people, says Chris Boardman, and the government should do everything it can to "get everything out of the way" of allowing people to ride.

The Tour de France yellow jersey holder and 1992 Olympic gold medallist told The Sun that giving overweight people bikes would be more effective than paying for them to go to the gym.

He said: "The problem with those solutions is that they bolt on to your life so they’re a chore.

"If you can build an activity almost subconsciously into getting around then it happens organically. And that’s sustainable.

"If I want to go to the gym I come in some nights and I’m tired and I can’t be bothered. If when I come in I’ve just done three or four miles home, I’ve already done my exercise.

"The vast majority of journeys in this country are less than five miles. Thirty per cent are less than two miles and still the preference is to make them by car.

"So if it becomes part of the fabric of my life I’m going to do it.

"The Department of Health should be screaming at the top of its voice and banging on doors saying for God's sake if people want to ride bikes, get everything out of their way and we’re all going to benefit."

Boardman said last year that cycling is, "the answer to so many problems … Health, transport, pollution, all of those issues are solved with this simple machine."

In that interview he added: "If cycling isn't made the easiest possible option for people then they will choose the easiest option because that's what they do."

Tam Fry of the National Obesity Forum, supported Boardman. He told the Daily Mail cycling would help overweight Brits keep their weight down.

Fry said: "Bicycling helps all the muscle groups. It is a brilliant exercise."

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

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58 comments

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McDuff73 | 10 years ago
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The saving made would far outweigh the initial cost and I also agree with the sentiment make cycling so easy and so safe as to benefit society

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ragtag | 10 years ago
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Bikes are considerably cheaper than the drugs and the treatment that the NHS has to provide to obese people.

Overall cost of obesity to the NHS is around £4bn, estimated to rise next year to over £6bn.

Bariatric surgery alone costs £32 million pa. Diabetes treatment costs around £700 million pa. There is the increase in knee and hip surgery, provision of mobility scooters and the every increasing number of prescriptions for high blood pressure.

The wider cost to the UK economy is around £27bn (Foresight Report).

Not to mention the 30,000 people that die prematurely each year of obesity-related conditions.

Bikes are one thing, decent infrastructure is another. We need both.

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ragtag | 10 years ago
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Bikes are considerably cheaper than the drugs and the treatment that the NHS has to provide to obese people.

Overall cost of obesity to the NHS is around £4bn, estimated to rise next year to over £6bn.

Bariatric surgery alone costs £32 million pa. Diabetes treatment costs around £700 million pa. There is the increase in knee and hip surgery, provision of mobility scooters and the every increasing number of prescriptions for high blood pressure.

The wider cost to the UK economy is around £27bn (Foresight Report).

Not to mention the 30,000 people that die prematurely each year of obesity-related conditions.

Bikes are one thing, decent infrastructure is another. We need both.

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ragtag | 10 years ago
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Bikes are considerably cheaper than the drugs and the treatment that the NHS has to provide to obese people.

Overall cost of obesity to the NHS is around £4bn, estimated to rise next year to over £6bn.

Bariatric surgery alone costs £32 million pa. Diabetes treatment costs around £700 million pa. There is the increase in knee and hip surgery, provision of mobility scooters and the every increasing number of prescriptions for high blood pressure.

The wider cost to the UK economy is around £27bn (Foresight Report).

Not to mention the 30,000 people that die prematurely each year of obesity-related conditions.

Bikes are one thing, decent infrastructure is another. We need both.

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Sidi 700c replied to ragtag | 10 years ago
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Don't forget to add the cost of getting those obese patients to and from their doctors appointments. In the UK the NHS pays for taxi's.

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Leodis | 10 years ago
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So CB wants the overstretched NHS to give away free bikes when their staff are over worked and under paid and their health is suffering... I usually have respect for CB but he is wrong on this.

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ragtag replied to Leodis | 10 years ago
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This would help the staff be less overstretched if a policy of prevention was put in place, rather than the reactive treatment we have now.

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rliu | 10 years ago
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Plenty of sceptics on the Daily Mail website with this same press release, people moaning about their taxes being misspent as per usual, overlooking the fact that people getting heart bypass surgeries and diabetes medicines etc. on the NHS costs many times more than chucking a few cheapo £300 bikes at them in some effort to tackle the obesity crisis in this country. Unless we're going to just let people die from their life choices, saying fat people shouldn't get rewarded with freebies for being fat is a false economy.
Also frankly I'd rather some British bike manufacturers got this contract to provide NHS bikes than tax dodging big pharmas like Pfizer continuing to profit off their semi-toxic pills.

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HarrogateSpa | 10 years ago
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I have some sympathy with the people arguing that the NHS shouldn't pay for bikes. However, Boardman's broader argument - that obesity is very expensive for the NHS - is surely correct.

Whilst we can argue over the details, Boardman is the best cycling advocate we have, and I hope he keeps making his points, and more politicians start listening.

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domd | 10 years ago
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maybe he is trying to flog more of his bikes  3

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james123 | 10 years ago
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I am generally a big supporter of Chris Boardman and his arguments and policies BUT I agree with Cavmem1. We need to stop this nonsense, why should an already stretched NHS pay for bikes? If these people (the target audience) had any motivation at all would they not just grab themselves a cheap but working secondhand bike (maybe £30?). Personal responsibility people, I'd almost go so far to say that the better route is to withdraw free NHS entitlement for certain people if they're not helping themselves and putting in effort to remedy their situation. An example is an otherwise healthy person who has eaten themselves into obesity and can't be arsed to do exercise or change diet. This doesn't mean we shouldn't offer reasonable help/support/advice for people who want to help themselves and are taking responsibility. As a nation we seem obsessed with mothering lazy people and not always helping those that deserve it. Just my personal opinion.

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gazza_d replied to james123 | 10 years ago
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james123 wrote:

I am generally a big supporter of Chris Boardman and his arguments and policies BUT I agree with Cavmem1. We need to stop this nonsense, why should an already stretched NHS pay for bikes? If these people (the target audience) had any motivation at all would they not just grab themselves a cheap but working secondhand bike (maybe £30?). Personal responsibility people, I'd almost go so far to say that the better route is to withdraw free NHS entitlement for certain people if they're not helping themselves and putting in effort to remedy their situation. An example is an otherwise healthy person who has eaten themselves into obesity and can't be arsed to do exercise or change diet. This doesn't mean we shouldn't offer reasonable help/support/advice for people who want to help themselves and are taking responsibility. As a nation we seem obsessed with mothering lazy people and not always helping those that deserve it. Just my personal opinion.

Why should the NHS pay?

Because inactivity and obesity related conditions cost at least £2 BILLION a year.

Do you say the same about smoking which costs about £4-5 billion? Look at how much treatment costs and how much effort is poured into preventing & stopping smoking?

Actually, cycling as a mode of transport and especially as an active mode is often ignored or missed by many areas within the health service from health promotion, though GP & community services to acute services from hospitals, as well as the general public. I work in the health service & as a vocal advocate of cycling I take note of the various promotions I see and I see very little reference to cycling with the exception of the odd short leisure ride.

Obesity and inactivity is a massive public health time bomb, and something needs to be done.

LAs & health orgs already push exercise with free or reduced gym and leisure centre passes. Giving out free or subsidised bikes alongside or as replacements makes more sense as the patient can use the bike as transport or for short leisure rides, and integrate into their life rather than having to find time for something else.

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congokid replied to james123 | 10 years ago
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james123 wrote:

I am generally a big supporter of Chris Boardman and his arguments and policies BUT I agree with Cavmem1. We need to stop this nonsense, why should an already stretched NHS pay for bikes?

If you read Chris Boardman's comments under the headline, you'll see he isn't advocating that the NHS buy bikes for anyone.

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james123 replied to congokid | 10 years ago
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I read it that he is suggesting exactly that

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farrell replied to james123 | 10 years ago
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james123 wrote:

I read it that he is suggesting exactly that

How is he "suggesting exactly that"? Can you copy and paste from the article the quote where he suggests free bikes on the NHS?

Helpful hint here for you, the headline is not a quote.

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CarlosFerreiro | 10 years ago
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I've seen a study that put the savings on NHS budgets as £1 per new mile walked or cycled. While there is a moral issue with "assistance" for things that people can do for themselves, the purely financial side could come out with NHS money for bikes (or infrastructure) being value for money.

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cavmem1 | 10 years ago
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I'm sorry but I fail to see why my taxes should pay for someone to have a bike,
It's simple get off your arse and walk.
It costs nothing and will over time produce benefits, then when you can go for a run and lo and behold you are exercising and losing weight.
The Nhs should not be for this or sex changes or gastric band ops.
This crap has to stop.
When are people going to take responsibilities for their own life choices?

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youngoldbloke replied to cavmem1 | 10 years ago
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Cavmem1 - Don't your taxes already help to pay for the cycle to work scheme? Why not VAT free bikes 'on prescription' - it won't cost the NHS anything. Why not VAT free bikes for the over 65s, the obese, those with type2 diabetes, heart disease (etc. etc.)?

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Simon E replied to cavmem1 | 10 years ago
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cavmem1 wrote:

I'm sorry but I fail to see why my taxes should pay for someone to have a bike,
It's simple get off your arse and walk.
It costs nothing and will over time produce benefits, then when you can go for a run and lo and behold you are exercising and losing weight.
The Nhs should not be for this or sex changes or gastric band ops.
This crap has to stop.
When are people going to take responsibilities for their own life choices?

Ah, the zeal of the new convert  3

It should be blindingly obvious that most people are not voluntarily making sensible life choices. It has been like this for centuries, it's hard wired into our evolution.

How can we persuade them to "get off their arses"? How would you react if I told you that you have to walk to the shops to lose weight? What were your life choices like before you started cycling regularly?

People believe they have a right to drive everywhere, all the time. They moan about queues and congestion but each one is part of the problem. Royal Shrewsbury Hospital's parking charges are demonised as robbing innocent victims yet every driver expects a rectangle of marked tarmac to be available when they choose to arrive. None of the tightarses who complain about paying £2.50 ever think to ride a bike or take the bus that stops outside the door.

There is HUGE vested interest in keeping us spending - buying cars and filling them with fuel at every opportunity. The food & drink industry is inventing new products and slick marketing schemes to appeal to our instincts every day. They want us to buy more and more processed junk food, fags and booze, not fruit and veg, so billionaires can get even richer. I see it every week in The Grocer.

Until the government takes the health and environmental issues we face more seriously then nothing will change. But they are far keener to spend our taxes on killing more people in the Middle East and £3.5 bn for new armoured vehicles.

I think Boardman is saying this mainly to get people talking, to bring attention to the issue. I don't think free bikes are the answer - giving stuff away rarely works - but just telling people to make better life choices is definitely NOT going to work. If you don't believe me then try it on the people who live in your street.

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allezrider | 10 years ago
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Free bikes on the NHS won't get any more people riding - there are millions of unused bikes in sheds/garages all over the country - it is the attitude of many that cycling is something you do when you are young and can't afford to run a car. If people really want to lose weight they will do so (barring the few who have real medical conditions that prevent them doing so), they just have to believe that they will benefit from it and that the benefit will outweigh the effort. We need to stop saying 'do what you like through your life and the free NHS service will pick up the tab to try and put you right when you get sick'.

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congokid | 10 years ago
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SideBurn wrote:

How morbidly obese would I need to be do you think?

Obese enough to benefit from regular cycling, but not so obese the bike collapses underneath you...

Chris is right of course that barriers to mass cycling need to be removed, but the cost of a bike is not really a barrier. The lack of infrastructure is.

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SideBurn | 10 years ago
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Would this mean I could get a Pinarello Dogma on prescription  36
Or maybe a De Rosa King RS  3
How morbidly obese would I need to be do you think?

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Simmo72 | 10 years ago
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Agree with 'must be mad'. Remove some extreme exceptions and most people are prepared to buy a bike, what is putting people off is the lack of infrastructure, the bias towards cars, the attitude of some drivers (and some cyclists). I suspect most of these people he is trying to target are going to be motorists so if you can afford to run a car, the savings introduced by replacing some journeys offset some of the running costs.

There are plenty of other exercise alternatives for the overweight. walking, taking the stairs, it all helps.

I think Chris is doing a great job but I think this is taking things too far and is adding extra burden to NHS costs. People need to take responsibility for themselves more, the nanny state is ruining this country.

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Must be Mad | 10 years ago
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For a more sensible response - I don't think that the price of bikes is a barrier to getting people cycling.

Getting the infrastructure in place so people can fee safe IS a barrier - and perhaps cycling lessons from the NHS might be do-able.

One point I would like to make - my wife would like to cycle, but doesn't have the sense of balance/fitness for a bicycle just yet. However she would love to have a tricycle to get about on - but when we look for options, adult tricycles seem difficult to get hold of and prohibitively expensive...

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EarsoftheWolf | 10 years ago
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Instead of free, how about a bike rental for the price of an NHS subscription?

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Must be Mad | 10 years ago
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There is certainly logic to Boardman's idea.

Give out the free bikes to all - but stipulate they can only be ridden in the new Forest.......

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notfastenough | 10 years ago
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He has a point, although I can just see the bikes being sold for a few quid instead.

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Manchestercyclist | 10 years ago
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As usual speaking sense, it won't win votes though.

Whereas the government does allocate police time to dealing with people driving in the middle lane, clearly in their eyes a massive cause of social ill.

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