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V12 address change

Make sure your V12 Retail Finance contact details are correct by updating your records. 

8 Sep 2022, more…

27% drop in number of cycling trips per person in 2021 compared to 2020, new data reveals.

27% drop in number of cycling trips per person in 2021 compared to 2020, new data reveals.

6 Sep 2022, more…

It’s Cycle September

There’s still time for bike shops to urge their customers to get involved with Cycle September, the world’s biggest group ride.

5 Sep 2022, more…

Time for indie retailers to lobby MPs for energy help

ActSmart, ACT, Booksellers Association, Craft Bakers Association, British Sandwich & Food to Go Association and the Café Life Association from the Independent Retailers’...

2 Sep 2022, more…

More people leaving shops without paying amid cost-of-living crisis

Home Office data has shown more customers leaving shops, restaurants and petrol stations without paying as the cost-of-living crisis bites. The data shows there were 51,486 offences of...

1 Sep 2022, more…

Charity ramps up financial advice for independent retailers

Industry charity GroceryAid has teamed up with Business Debtline to provide support and guidance to the growing number of independent retailers facing debt and unpaid invoices.
The move...

31 Aug 2022, more…

Energy crisis prompts fears of a ‘generation of lost businesses’

Nearly 14% of small UK businesses expect to close in the next twelve months, according to a new report published by the Federation of Small Businesses.

30 Aug 2022, more…

TRA proposes to lower import tariff rates for Chinese e-bike manufacturers

The Trade Remedies Authority, the UK body that investigates whether new trade remedy measures are needed to counter unfair import practices and unforeseen surges of imports, has proposed that...

25 Aug 2022, more…

GPs to prescribe cycling to help improve mental & physical health

The Department for Transport has announced a £12.7m trial to begin later this year, in which GPs in England will be able to prescribe walking or cycling as a way of improving mental and...

24 Aug 2022, more…

Cyber security only prioritised by businesses after a data breach, DCMS reports

Government research has revealed that UK businesses only begin to appreciate the importance of cyber security once the business has sustained a “serious” attack.

23 Aug 2022, more…

GPs to prescribe cycling to help improve mental & physical health

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GPs to prescribe cycling to help improve mental & physical health

Posted on 24 Aug 2022

The Department for Transport has announced a £12.7m trial to begin later this year, in which GPs in England will be able to prescribe walking or cycling as a way of improving mental and physical health and easing the burden on the NHS.

Initially 11 places will receive funding for doctors are to start "social prescription" pilots. The plan aims to reduce GP appointments and people's reliance on medication. The pilots run until 2025 in Bradford, Leeds, Doncaster, Cumbria, Gateshead, Nottingham, Staffordshire, Suffolk, Plymouth, Cornwall, Bath and NE Somerset.

The new Gear Change Plan pilots would be "hugely beneficial" to overall mental and physical health, said the DfT. The pilots will include adult cycle training for all abilities, plus more walking groups for exercise and mental health. Free bike loans will be offered.

Walking and cycling minister Trudy Harrison said more cycling and walking would "ease the burden on our NHS" as well as "improving air quality and reducing congestion".

The government said the authorities must also improve infrastructure, so people felt safe walking and cycling.

"We need healthier, cheaper and more pleasant ways to get around for everyday trips," he said cyclist Chris Boardman, commissioner of National Active Travel, a government agency set up to improve the UK's cycling and walking infrastructure.

"Moving more will lead to a healthier nation, a reduced burden on the NHS, less cancer, heart disease and diabetes, and huge cost savings."

However, while GPs agree the pilot funding is "great news", with obesity a risk factor for Type-2 diabetes, cancers, liver and respiratory disease, some say overstretched surgeries cannot take on even more work created by the pilots.

"Should GPs refer people to these schemes, or should they look after sick people?" asked Doncaster GP Dr Dean Eggitt.  "We don't have capacity for both."

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