I have been spending a lot of time looking at "The Healthier Dancer Programme", which is going ahead with Dance UK. Previously in module 2 I blogged about the Healthier Dancer Programme (HDP) but now as it is going ahead I have a lot more information on the ins and outs and access to what is really going on.
This is really important to me as I am looking at ideas that the HDP is putting into practice and using some of their ideas alongside my own for inquiry.
All of the information about the HDP can be found on the Dance UK website at:
https://www.danceuk.org/healthier-dancer-programme/
The HUGE deal about this project is that it aims to help freelance dancers like myself who do not have access to specialist care for injury without either paying a lot of money to be privately seen or waiting for a long time to be seen by someone who may not be a specialist in dance. It aims to do this in many ways, one of them being setting up hub- sites around the UK.
The first hub- site is being set up and based at the Royal National Orthopedic hospital. This service is an "NHS based dance injury clinic accessible FREE via GP referral.": Dance UK 2012,
Six Major Dance Organisations, Universities and a Hospital Unite to Launch The First National Institute of Dance Medicine & Science, DanceUK website [online], available from: https://www.danceuk.org/healthier-dancer-programme/national-institute-dance-medicine-and-science/, accessed 22nd October 2012.
This is great news for dancers but it would seem not so much for the rest of the non dancing population as I found out from the comments of an article that was published in April by the BBC news.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-17846564
There are many views in the comments, most show that the audience who have read the article do not appreciate dance and a lot are flippant remarks but it has made me think that maybe it is wrong to have free treatment for our high risk sport- I can't make up my mind. On the other hand, a lot of money in the NHS is spend on things that are irrelevant to myself and one example that I know of is the help of quitting smoking and treating smoking related diseases.
Of course I believe that the NHS should treat smokers, this is just an example, but if the general public allows the NHS to spend money on projects like this where there are no health benefits of smoking in the first place (what I mean is all smokers know smoking is unhealthy before they start), why not spend money on helping injured dancers when dance has so many health benefits like increasing general fitness.
Is it wrong to spend NHS money on helping injured dancers?
Is it wrong to spend NHS money on helping ill smokers who knew the health risks?
I intend to ask my interviewees the question of whether they believe this is a good idea or not to try and justify whether or not it should go ahead. What do you as a dancer think?
Dance UK 2012,
Six Major Dance Organisations, Universities and a Hospital Unite to Launch The First National Institute of Dance Medicine & Science, DanceUK website [online], available from: https://www.danceuk.org/healthier-dancer-programme/national-institute-dance-medicine-and-science/, accessed 22nd October 2012.
Branwen Jeffreys, April 2012, First dance injury clinic for NHS to open, BBC news website [online], available from: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-17846564, accessed 22nd october 2012