The Coming Collapse of the U.S. Overall health Treatment Process

It’s 4 in the early morning and you awaken with crushing chest ache. Your relatives phone calls 911 and paramedics arrive and diagnose a cardiac party. They inform you that they need to transportation you forty-5 minutes away since your two area hospitals have shut over the last many months. Even when you arrive at the hospital, there is substantial overcrowding and they advise you that there are no ICU beds open up for you in that fifty % of the beds in the cardiac device are “browned out” due to absence of staff. This nightmare is an all too familiar post pandemic truth about the delivery of health and fitness care in our country. This is not the expectation that the general public expects in the shipping of health care in just one of the richest nations in the environment that has been at the chopping edge of wellness care innovation of the last century.

What has led to this publish-pandemic nightmare is multifactorial. The pandemic modified how well being treatment specialists are both of those valued and how they see themselves. Throughout the peak of the pandemic they have been heroes that have been endangering their lives to aid the neighborhood. But now matters seem unique.

All around 7,000 nurses on strike in New York City nursing strike is emblematic of the dire scenario. Nurses, who are necessary to the vital performing of all hospitals, are entitled not only to extra equitable payment and benefits, but in the end safer staffing ratios in all affected person care options. What is ironic is that the strike will drive these extremely health care methods to replace utilized nurses with short-term nurses from staffing businesses, additional compounding their monetary woes, and in the end, their bottom traces. Until eventually we make investments in individuals and their value in health care, we will not be ready to see mild at the close of the tunnel.

Everyday we read about hospitals in the course of the region dropping millions if not billions of pounds for each year. Hospitals are closing urgent care centers, obstetric, pediatric and other services to try to survive. A single of the major aspects that has induced this disaster is the absence of team. Write-up-pandemic clinic staffing has massively lowered with a rise in short term locum staffing dependency. Hospitals and clinicians no for a longer period have

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ACSM’s Health & Fitness Journal

INTRODUCTION

The results of this year’s survey could very well be titled “postpandemic recovery impacts the fitness industry” or “what happened to online training and home gyms”? During the COVID-19 era of quarantine, face coverings, social distancing, and health club closures, fitness professionals turned in an impressive way to an online delivery of fitness programming. In fact, the 2021 survey placed online training as the #1 trend. It fell to #9 for 2022 and now is out of the top 20 at the #21 position. Online personal training went from #17 for 2022 to #26 for 2023. Home exercise gyms was #2 for 2022 dropping to #13 for 2023. The health and fitness industry is returning to the basics, with strength training with free weights the #2 trend, body weight training as the #3 trend, and functional fitness training as the #5 trend for 2023. Fitness programs for older adults was the #4 trend for 2023. As it has for the past 17 years, the results outcome of this annual survey helps health and fitness professionals make critical business decisions for future growth and development. These investments can be based on emerging trends that have been identified by health and fitness professionals all over the world instead of basing these decisions on the latest exercise infomercials found on television, social media, or the next hottest celebrity endorsing a product.

For the last 17 years, the editors of this Journal (HFJ) have developed and circulated an electronic survey sent to thousands of professionals around the world to predict trends in the health and fitness industry for the following year. The author is grateful to all those who have contributed to the success of these surveys through the years (see sidebar).

Sidebar: Special Thanks

The author wishes to recognize and thank those who have participated in the creation and maintenance of ACSM’s Worldwide Survey of Fitness Trends through the years, especially the following:

Past Editors-in-Chief Ed Howley, Ph.D., FACSM, and Steven Keteyian, Ph.D., FACSM, for considering this project important enough to include in this Journal more than a decade ago, and to current Editor-in-Chief Brad Roy, Ph.D., FACSM, for continuing the tradition.

This Journal’s editorial team, especially those who contributed to the original survey in 2006: Paul Couzelis, Ph.D.; John Jakicic, Ph.D., FACSM; Nico Pronk, Ph.D., FACSM; Mike Spezzano, M.S.; Neal Pire, M.A., FACSM; Jim Peterson, Ph.D., FACSM;

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