KUALA LUMPUR, 22 Jan 2018:
The Health Ministry has called for the setting up of a exercise clinic in all districts in the country to encourage behavioral change to reduce the risk of getting non-communicable diseases (NCDs) – which is on the rising trend.
Deputy minister Datuk Seri Dr Hilmi Yahaya said this is important in view of an estimated 73% of total deaths in government hospitals being due to NCDs.
“Exercise therapy through exercise clinics has the potential in preventing NCDs through the prescription of right amount of exercise.”
Exercise therapy has the potential of treating and preventing four main NCDs – hypertension, diabetes, obesity and dyslipidemia – through prescription of the right kind of therapy.
The therapy, which has the potential to be an alternative remedy to conventional medicine in preventing NCDs, had proven to produce many positive changes to the human body if executed in the right manner.
Dr Hilmi said the ministry would collaborate with the private sector under the National Blue Ocean Strategy initiative to raise public awareness on the importance of adopting a healthy lifestyle by going to exercise clinics.
MS New Symphony Exercise Clinic, said to be the first exercise clinic in Malaysia, is in Bukit Jalil. The clinic – which provides a range of services in helping people to prevent chronic diseases – features a fully computerised exercise prescription protocol to treat and intervene border line NCDs with the right amount of exercise.
Exercise therapist Prof Dr Lee Chee Peng said Malaysia would host the 2nd World Conference on Exercise Medicine (WCEM) in Malacca in September this year.
Lee, who is vice chairman of WCEM, said the conference would gather exercise scientists, physicians, therapists and coaches to deliberate on exercise medicine, which was increasingly gaining acceptance among Malaysians.
– Bernama