As a business owner and operator of a health and fitness facility in Delacombe, many gym and fitness studio owners in and around Ballarat and their members are questioning why they remain closed when there has been zero COVID-19 cases in Ballarat and the case average in regional Victoria is currently 0.4. Gym users are primarily local residents (i.e. not tourist or travellers from metropolitan Melbourne) and lessons learnt from the first wave ensured gyms put in place COVID-19 safe plans.
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The second wave was a result of decisions made in managing hotel quarantine and not because of the way in which gyms and fitness facilities (and other businesses) were managed. While environments that were contained with poor airflow were considered to be higher risk of infections based on how the virus is dispersed and viability on surfaces, gyms - like many other businesses (and industry) - were proactive in adapting and protecting their members and the community from the outset of the pandemic.
While supermarkets, hardware shops, restaurants, hairdressers, beauty salons etc remain open (or have since re-opened), the standards implemented at gyms surpass many of those implemented in these businesses, yet remain closed. Gym owners increased their expenditure to purchase appropriate cleaning equipment effective against coronavirus (which coincidentally tripled or more in price!), modified their gym layouts to ensure safe distancing and set up hand hygiene and cleaning stations and protocols - yet remain closed.
Although it is welcoming to see the re-opening of beauty salons and other services where there is close contact with customers that allow businesses to re-open, how do risks to COVID-19 compare in these environments to someone working out by themselves in a controlled space with a cap on numbers and monitored hygiene and cleaning protocols measure?
How does a group of people sitting in restaurant chatting (without masks) and eating for up to one hour with waiters moving from table to table in a comparatively small confined space with multiple use of the toilets be considered a lesser risk than a gym that is 200-300 square metres or more with high ceilings and only 20 people spread out working out on their own and cleaning between equipment use?
I know in discussion with members that many feel safer in a gym that has control on behaviours and hygiene protocols that are in place and visibly implemented than in a shopping mall or supermarket.
Gyms can adapt and if there is an evidence that there are increased risk due to increased breathing rates when using cardio machines like treadmills, then these could be turned off. Many gyms can still remain open and accessible to members keen to maintain their exercise routine without the use of cardio machines. Gyms are much more than for cardio workouts.
Exercise has countless benefits on improving physical and mental health outcomes which lessen the burden to the public health system and to the economy.
We have members at our gym with both neurological and diseases of the central nervous system where exercise has been prescribed by their physician. We also have veterans from serving in Iraq and Afghanistan to manage the effects of post-traumatic stress.
Understanding how the virus spreads was instrumental in how gym owners re-oriented their gym to reduce the risk. Many went above and beyond what any government advised on safety with some implementing COVID-19 safe plans that had been required in other states, but not in Victoria.
Many gyms and fitness clubs surpass the required standard of hygiene and, as a business, they want to ensure that facilities meet the standards expected by their paying members
This was particularly important when a lessening of restrictions allowed gyms to reopen on June 22 after a three-month closure only to close again on August 5 (early July for metropolitan Melbourne) following the re-emergence of the disease into the community by known failures in the hotel quarantine program.
Following the enquiry into the hotel quarantine that concluded that there were significant breaches on infection prevention and control and lack of professional accountability that led to a second wave resulting in the resignation of the health minister, many feel gyms and fitness facilities were closed not because it was deemed a risk to health but, due to the perceived errors made by the government and the decisions made which then compromised many small and medium businesses that enjoy a face-to-face existence with their customers.
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The perception is the state government appears to put all gyms and fitness centres into one box and continually claim that gyms were unsafe, yet have not been able to provide evidence to peak body Fitness Australia that infection was a result of transmission of coronavirus inside a well-run and infection control-conscious gym. Not all gyms are the same!
Similarly, COVID-19 outbreaks did not occur in every aged care home. Like gyms, aged care homes are not all the same and much depends on their standards of care and operation (and their owners!). Did all aged care home businesses close? No, as not all aged care homes are the same!
Gyms are local-member based which requires members to tag or 'sign in' and are used by locals (i.e. not travellers who might use a gym in a hotel or sporting club). Many gyms have 24-hour CCTV and increased their staff presence hours to observe behaviours and take actions if necessary. Our gym and many others' members were very proactive in adhering to COVID-19 prevention measures and dutifully wiped down equipment before and after use.
A big credit here should go to the people of Ballarat and regional Victoria as a whole who have done the hard work and made sacrifices to keep our community safe. As well as touch-free sanitizers, gyms have washrooms, disinfectant wipes, safe distance and hygiene signage and staff were required to complete the government infection control training course. I am sure this standard is adopted in many small to medium owner-operated gyms and studios.
Gyms invested heavily in protecting their members by installing sanitisers (often at inflated costs due to demand), spacing equipment by at least 1.5 meters and signage on COVID-19 safe measures. Numbers were capped so that only 20 people could be in the gym at one time (less for smaller gyms). Group classes and exercise activities that caused members or personal trainers to be closer than 1.5 metres were suspended.
As a result of the decisions made in managing hotel quarantine and lack of foresight on public health risks in infectious disease management, local gyms and those providing health and fitness services have suffered both emotionally and financially.
For many, the gym is a place not only to exercise and improve fitness and health outcomes but a place to have 'time out'.
For some, the road to recovery will be long and hard and re-building community confidence will take time. Some gyms may even have to call it a day due to financial hardship which will also impact on their members.
Members who use the gym to maintain and improve their physical and mental health have also suffered greatly. As a result, there is likely to be an increase in non-communicable diseases due to increased sedentary lifestyles and increased mental health issues resulting from the effects of isolation, uncertainty and lack of exercise.
Australia (particularly in regional Australia) has one of the highest rates of obesity and cardiovascular disease per capita in the world. The secondary impacts on health as a result of COVID-19 and the pain and emotional toll many have endured to bring the case numbers down due to fundamental errors in risk management planning when we were at a stage of suppressing the virus to manageable levels back in June will be huge.
For many, the gym is a place not only to exercise and improve fitness and health outcomes but a place to have 'time out'.
While the government is considered by many to be doing a good job as a result of the second wave, it is felt the job at hand is a result of many errors made by the decision-makers and not industry that were the first to implement COVID-19 safety measures. Many gyms and fitness clubs surpass the required standard of hygiene and, as a business, they want to ensure that facilities meet the standards expected by their paying members.
Even when asked, the government and their departments (at least in Victoria) have not as of today come forward to suggest to gyms or fitness facilities on what needs to be done to meet expectations and provide a COVID-19 safe environment. While the immediate risks to COVID-19 must be addressed, there is little perceived attention to the social and economic welfare of the community and secondary health impacts caused by lockdowns.
Like many other gym owners, I am confident gyms can still operate safely and provide a much-needed service that, on the longer term, reduces the burden on the public health service, improves quality of life and helps address anxiety and stress caused by lockdowns and uncertainly while at the same time protect those most vulnerable.
- Nick Prince (RN, MPH, Cert 3/Cert 4 Fitness, Dip Sport Psychology), co-owner QuickFit Health Club, Delacombe
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