Pensioners to get JUDO lessons to improve their balance and teach them how to ... trends now

Pensioners to get JUDO lessons to improve their balance and teach them how to ... trends now
Pensioners to get JUDO lessons to improve their balance and teach them how to ... trends now

Pensioners to get JUDO lessons to improve their balance and teach them how to ... trends now

View
comments

Pensioners will be given judo lessons to improve their balance and teach them how to fall safely in a bid reduce injuries and hospital admissions.

Coaches from sports body British Judo will touch on 18 different judo techniques that have been adapted for elderly Britons at risk of harm.

The exercises and movements aim to boost strength and balance, reduce the fear of falling and minimise the injuries from a fall.

The experts will also demonstrate how to get up easily after taking a tumble, as part of the nationwide Finding Your Feet programme.

There are around 210,000 fall-related hospital admissions for over-65s in England each year, according to Age UK.

Coaches from sports body British Judo will touch on 18 different judo techniques that have been adapted for elderly Britons at risk of harm

Coaches from sports body British Judo will touch on 18 different judo techniques that have been adapted for elderly Britons at risk of harm

One in three people aged over 65 and half of those aged over 80 will suffer at least one fall a year, with fragility fractures costing the UK an estimated £4.4billion annually.

Separate figures show falls are the number one reason older people are taken to A&E, with unaddressed fall hazards in homes costing the NHS in England an estimated £435 million.

The techniques being taught include yoko ukemi, which is a sideways fall that instills the three principles of falling: protecting the head, creating a large surface area, and timing and rolling.

Other key techniques will include learning how to tuck the chin in when falling backwards and how to fall forward without using hands.

Read More

Need a new knee? Now you can 'grow your own' after a one-hour op on the NHS

article image

A series of 'train the trainer' sessions have now begun, with judo coaches preparing to deliver classes to the general public from the second half of this year.

Dr Katrina McDonald, a judo coach and senior lecturer in sport and exercise science at Anglia Ruskin University, helped to write the Finding Your Feet programme for British Judo.

She said: 'There is a vicious circle associated with falling that the Finding Your Feet programme is aiming to break.

'When an individual has a fall they are scared of it

read more from dailymail.....

PREV The REAL reason no one should have to pay for their prescriptions - and it ... trends now
NEXT UK's prostate cancer revolution: 'Biggest trial in a generation' could lead to ... trends now