Health Handouts : Company Wellness Programs: Physical Activity With Co-employees

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Posted by Health Handouts | Posted in Health Handouts, Health Tips | Posted on 03-08-2009

• Establish a launch event to foster excitement about upcoming activities and to establish a social climate that establishes being active as the norm.
• Design and encourage monthly or bi-monthly business activities that are fun and active, e.g., picnics with physical games, employee tournaments and dragon boat racing. Urge families to join in by including all-ages activities such as relay races, soccer matches, bocce ball and baseball games.
• Start a swim club at a local pool. Invite groups of workers to swim the distance of a nearby lake. Convert kilometres to lengths and reward workers who complete the swim. Set up a challenge between workers and managers to see who covers the greatest distance.
• Post a sign-up board where employee can join a group or find a buddy to participate in activities of interest.
• Organize a business badminton tournament that lasts several months, with each employee playing once a week. Post the results as the tournament progresses.
• Establish an office Olympics, World Cup, Wimbledon or Masters Games. Invite teams to compete in several activities over a month. Reward everyone who participates.
• Establish a point system in which one minute of exercise equals one point. Set a target, and post a chart where all staff members have the potential to track their points. Reward the first group to reach that target.
• Create a stair climb challenge. Post a chart at the top of the stairwell, and promote employees to track the number of flights of stairs they climb each workday. Set up teams, and award a prize to the first group to climb the equivalent of Mount Everest.
• Post and reward a sign-up board for lunchtime walking groups.
• Organize a walk “across the U.S.” Select a route, learn how many steps it would take to walk that distance and challenge workers to do it. Give or loan pedometers to workers, and ask them to record the number of steps they take. Or, if you cannot afford pedometers, track the minutes walked. Set up a challenge between workers and managers to see who has the potential to walk across the U.S. first.
• Develop a walk to work club. Acknowledge workers who either walk to work or walk to public transit.
• Have a volunteer group leader guide weekly lunchtime power walks.
• Develop a million-step challenge. Form groups, challenge each group to walk a combined total of a million steps and reward the winner. Departments or sites might compete with each other and with management.
• Challenge staff members to walk 10,000 steps a day. Buy pedometers for all participating staff members or, if you can’t afford that, make pedometers available at a reduced rate. Provide tips for increasing daily steps, and reward staff members who succeed.

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