home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1993
/
TIME Almanac 1993.iso
/
time
/
073090
/
0730130.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1992-08-28
|
4KB
|
79 lines
HEALTH, Page 64From Workouts To Wellness
Exercise clubs now offer much more than sweat
When health clubs became a rage in the 1980s, everybody
loved to sweat. Squadrons of would-be Schwarzeneggers and
Fondas pumped iron, tightened tummies, aerobicized -- and often
found attractive new friends. But after years of pulling in
clients almost effortlessly, clubs are facing new challenges.
For one, the proliferation of health spas, which have doubled
in number, to 20,000, since 1980, has created fierce
competition. And as members grow older, they are becoming
pickier, more prone to injury and, often, just plain bored.
The result is a new buzz word for health clubs: wellness.
Many are evolving into comprehensive health centers, as
concerned with emotional and medical well-being as with thighs
and love handles. Nowadays, says Craig Pepin-Donat of the New
York Health and Racquet Club in Manhattan, people "want more
than sweat, metal and mirrors. They want places that are
concerned with the whole person."
John McCarthy, executive director of the Association of
Quality Clubs, reports that 25% of his 1,550 member clubs offer
seminars in nutrition, stress management and smoking cessation;
25% have weight-loss programs; and 12% provide courses in
self-esteem. Among the more adventurous is the Saw Mill River
Club in Mount Kisco, N.Y., which conducts lectures on
self-healing and hypnosis and occasionally brings in a sex
therapist for a panel discussion.
To gauge health needs, clubs are learning more about their
customers. During the New York Health and Racquet Club's
"life-style assessment," clients may be asked what they eat for
breakfast and how much alcohol they drink. At all 40 centers
of the nationwide Club Corporation of America, new members are
queried by a fitness specialist about their income level and,
to assess their state of stress, whether they have witnessed
a violent fight in the past year. Women are asked whether they
have had a hysterectomy. "We ask questions that many clubs will
not," says Club Corporation's Stephen Tharrett. "But we care,
and there are all facets of life we try to help people with. If
there are problems, we recommend that they see their physician."
Some medical people fear that clubs are going beyond their
expertise. "I'm not sure if they should be asking intimate,
medical questions," says Dr. Lyle Micheli, associate professor
of orthopedic surgery at Harvard's medical school. He cautions
clients to seek clubs whose staffers have degrees in nutrition
or exercise physiology, or certification from groups like the
American College of Sports Medicine.
Some fitness centers have begun to work cooperatively with
physicians and hospitals. A cardiologist from the University
of Minnesota is a consultant to the Marsh club in Minnetonka,
Minn. Chicago's East Bank Club is affiliated with the
University of Chicago Hospitals Physician Group and plans to
set up a sports-medicine facility staffed by orthopedists from
Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Last month at Boston's Le Pli
Enterprises, cosmetic surgeons began offering laser treatments
for broken capillaries.
Such extras are a long way from treadmills. But in the era
of supermarkets and mega-malls, people seem to go for one-stop
body care.
By Janice M. Horowitz. With reporting by Lynn Emmerman/Chicago.