
'Troubling decline' in secondary school PE lessons
In its annual report, the YST says that 2.2 million children in England are now doing less than 30 minutes of activity a day, and less than half (48%) are meeting the UK's Chief Medical Officers' recommendation of at least 60 minutes of physical activity a day.It says the steepest decline has hit 11-14-year-olds, with more than 2,800 hours cut and 347 teachers lost for this age group in the past year, at a time of rising childhood obesity rates.YST also adds that girls, children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), and those from disadvantaged backgrounds "continue to face the greatest barriers to being active".However, the study also found that 93% of young people believe PE is important, 71% want to be more active at school, and 96% of teachers agree that sport and play benefit mental wellbeing.
'We risk failing a generation'
While PE is a mandatory subject in schools, the recommended amount of two hours a week is not enforced.YST chief executive Ali Oliver said: "Our children are moving less, feeling unhappier, and losing access to the transformative power of PE, contributing to stagnant physical activity levels."The fall in PE hours is sadly an exacerbation of a longer-term trend and should be a wake-up call to society, from policymakers to schools and parents."Unless we take action to reverse these damaging trends and increase activity levels to improve wellbeing, we risk failing a generation."In a statement, the government said: "These figures highlight the government's dire inheritance, but we're determined to break down barriers to accessing PE and school sports for young people through our Plan for Change, helping to improve their mental and physical wellbeing."We are working across the government and with our partners including Youth Sport Trust and Sport England to boost participation and have already invested £100m to upgrade sports facilities and launched a programme to improve access to sports for pupils with special education needs and disabilities."Our ongoing curriculum and assessment review seeks to deliver a broader curriculum, so that children do not miss out on subjects including PE and sport."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
Hospital worker with fake ID fled UK after teenage girl, 14, died on his watch, inquest told
An agency care worker who failed to supervise a suicidal teenage girl at a scandal-hit mental health hospital was working under a fake ID and fled the country shortly after she died, an inquest has been told. Ruth Szymankiewiczat, 14, died after she was left alone at Huntercombe Hospital, near Maidenhead in Berkshire, despite requiring constant one-to-one observation, jurors at the inquest were told. The hearing was told the support worker who had been responsible for monitoring Ruth had only gone through a day or day-and-a-half of online training before his first shift at the children's psychiatric hospital on February 12, 2022. He left his shift at 8pm when it ended, but should have waited to hand over to another worker before doing so, to ensure Ruth could be watched at all times. But the coroner told the jury he 'just left', meaning Ruth was left alone for 15 minutes. In that time, Ruth, who had an eating disorder, made her way to her room where she committed an act of self harm. She was found and resuscited and transferred to the local acute hospital, John Radcliffe in Oxford, where she was admitted into intensive care. Ruth died two days later, on 14 February 2022, having suffered brain injury. Assitant coroner for Buckinghamshire, Ian Wade, said it later emerged that the worker, who joined the hospital on the day Ruth was left unattended, had been using false identity documents and was hired through an agency under a false name, Ebo Achempong. 'The evidence showed he had been employed through an agency, who checked his identity documents, and they even trained him by putting him through a day or day-and-a-half course,' Mr Wade told jurors. 'It appears that these particular processes were the norm and were sufficient to enable a hospital to employ this person. But on February 12, he did not keep Ruth under a constant watch. 'Some time around 8pm in the evening, this man ended his shift without knowing where she was and without making sure that he handed her over to another member of staff to continue the one-to-one care regime. 'He simply left.' Mr Wade continued: 'It turned out he wasn't Ebo Achempong, that was a false name. He had been assisted to acquire a false identity documents and he never returned to work at Huntercombe.' After Ruth's death, police tracked down the worker's phone which revealed he had gone 'to Heathrow airport and got on a plane to Ghana'. The coroner said police think they know 'who he truly was' but that he was "never seen again" after leaving the country. 'It seems that he learned what happened that evening,' Mr Wade said. "He let Ruth down. He let everyone down.' The inquest, which started on Monday, heard Ruth should have been under continuous one to one observations and watched at all times following a suicide attempt on 7 February. When Ms Szymankiewicz was left unsupervised, she was able to asphyxiate herself, the coroner said. A post-mortem examination carried out by the Home Office later determined the preliminary cause of death to be 'hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy' – a type of brain damage due to lack of oxygen. After Ruth's death, the Care Quality Commission launched a criminal investigation alongside the police. Police have taken no further action. The CQC have not stated whether they will take not yet taken forward a prosecution. The court further heard privately-run Huntercombe Hospital had been inspected twice by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) prior to the incident. 'The CQC had not reported favourably on Huntercombe,' the coroner told the inquest. The Huntercombe Hospital in Maidenhead, also called Taplow Manor, closed last year after joint investigations by The Independent and Sky News. It was part of a group, formerly run by The Huntercombe Group and now taken over by Active Care Group. Ruth's parents described the teenager as having 'lived life whole heartedly'. The inquest at Buckinghamshire Coroner's Court in Beaconsfield continues.


The Independent
41 minutes ago
- The Independent
Infections linked to wipes which may have been used to clean cuts
Health chiefs have linked a number of infections to certain cleaning wipes and urged people not to use them to treat cuts and scrapes. Certain products should be binned to avoid contamination, officials said. It comes after an outbreak of a bacteria, burkholderia stabilis (B. stabilis). There have been 51 confirmed cases of B. stabilis between 2018 and 2025, with 'some serious infections which have required hospital treatment', the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said. Health chiefs said the outbreak is 'suspected to be associated with some non-sterile alcohol-free wipe products'. UKHSA and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) are advising people to stop using the products, which they may find in their at-home first aid kit, and to put them in the bin. This includes: ValueAid Alcohol Free Cleansing Wipes; Microsafe Moist Wipe Alcohol Free and Steroplast Sterowipe Alcohol Free Cleansing Wipes. Testing also found contamination of Reliwipe Alcohol Free Cleansing Wipes, though with a different strain of the bacteria linked to the outbreak. While the warning only relates to the wipes listed, officials have reminded the public that non-sterile alcohol-free wipes should not be used for the treatment of wounds. Dr James Elston, consultant in epidemiology at the UKHSA said: 'While the overall risk to the public remains very low, a number of non-sterile alcohol-free wipe products have been linked to an outbreak of Burkholderia stabilis. 'It is important these types of wipes are not used for the treatment of injuries, wounds, or broken skin, and that they are not used to clean intravenous lines. 'When treating cuts and grazes, it is important to follow NHS advice.' Dr Alison Cave, MHRA's chief safety officer, added: 'We consider wipes which are intended for a medical purpose to be medicines. These products do not have a medicines authorisation, and we are taking appropriate action to ensure compliance with the requirements of the applicable legislation governed by MHRA. 'If you have these wipes at home or in a first aid kit, please check the label and only use wipes marked as 'sterile' on broken skin.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Fiona Phillips' husband Martin Frizell shares heartbreaking update on her Alzheimer's battle - admitting new hurdle has left her 'anxious, frustrated and frightened'
Fiona Phillips' husband Martin Frizell shared a heartbreaking update on her Alzheimer's battle during Monday's instalment of the Loose Women. Martin, 66, spoke to Jane Moore, 63, Kelly Brook, 45, Janet Street-Porter, 78, and Brenda Edwards, 56, about how his wife is doing after being diagnosed with the neurodegenerative disease, aged 61, in 2022. Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, degenerative disease of the brain, in which build-up of abnormal proteins causes nerve cells to die. Jane asked him: 'How is Jane right now?' Martin said: 'Well the good news is, there is some improvement in terms her mood, not so much in terms of Alzheimer's, but in term of just being able to get better sleep. 'Also having a better appetite, I think less confusion. That's sort of an anti-depressant she's been given. 'This one works, as you know, you have to go through quite a few before you get one that actually hits the spot. 'So this is really helping. If anything, she's actually in a much better place than she was a few weeks ago.' There is one thing in particular that Fiona is struggling with the most. Martin explained: 'Fiona's main problem with her Alzheimer's right now is her frustration. 'She's someone who has worked from the age of 11, at a paper round. Didn't stop working till a couple of years ago wen the Alzheimer's made it difficult to do so. 'She'll watch telly and she'll get frustrated that she's not working. She'll get anxious or frightened thinking about it. 'This was a fearless women. She spent decades doing this. Seeing her now in that anxious phase is horrible. 'The whole of Alzheimer's is horrible, as such.' Fiona was seen smiling and soaked up the sunshine in a lovely new video her husband Martin Frizell shared on Instagram last month It comes after a smiling Fiona thanked fans for their love and support in a lovely new video her husband Martin Frizell shared on Instagram late last month. In the clip, Fiona praised fans for their support on her new memoir, Remember When: My Life With Alzheimer's, as she enjoyed an ice cream while on a walk in London. She said: 'Hello, thank you for reading my new book! 'Really good of you, hope you like it. Okay, bye.' Martin captioned the post: 'Out for a walk and an Almond Magnum on a hot London afternoon and some words of gratitude for all the kind folk thinking of delving into her book.' In her candid new memoir, which published on last month, Martin shared how the couple struggled in the years leading up to her diagnosis. Speaking about the difficult period that began around 2015, Martin recalled: 'Nothing I could say seemed to help. He continued: 'And I guess like in any relationship, the whole thing spirals. Because I felt she was being moody and critical of everything I said and did, I shut down too. 'We were barely talking and while we were still in the same house we were living quite separate lives. 'If we were both at home in the evenings, there would be long silences. After years of being able to chat about anything and everything, we'd run out of things to talk about. 'The long silences can't have been enjoyable for her either, but that was where we had got to.' Fiona and Martin have been married since 2006. They share two sons Mackenzie, 21, and Nathaniel, 24. Loose Women airs weekdays from 12:30pm on ITV1 and is available to stream on ITVX. What is Alzheimer's? Alzheimer's disease is a progressive, degenerative disease of the brain, in which build-up of abnormal proteins causes nerve cells to die. This disrupts the transmitters that carry messages, and causes the brain to shrink. More than 5 million people suffer from the disease in the US, where it is the 6th leading cause of death, and more than 1 million Britons have it. WHAT HAPPENS? As brain cells die, the functions they provide are lost. That includes memory, orientation and the ability to think and reason. The progress of the disease is slow and gradual. On average, patients live five to seven years after diagnosis, but some may live for ten to 15 years. EARLY SYMPTOMS: Loss of short-term memory Disorientation Behavioral changes Mood swings Difficulties dealing with money or making a phone call LATER SYMPTOMS: