GAA Healthy Club Programme delivering health and wellbeing benefits worth €50m

December 15, 2023

In attendance at the GAA Healthy Clubs Recognition Event, supported by Irish Life, which saw 58 GAA clubs recognised as the first official 'Healthy Clubs' on the island of Ireland are, from left, Aoibhe Lalor age 7, Alannah Lalor, age 5, Méabh McDonald, age 4, and Conor McDonald, age 6, all from the St Colmcilles Healthy Club in Meath.

The Irish Life GAA Healthy Club Programme is delivering health and wellbeing benefits worth €50m to Ireland, according to the findings of an independent Social Return on  Investment (SROI) evaluation conducted by Just Economics.  

The research highlights that €19 of value is generated for every €1 of financial,  volunteer, and in-kind investment in the Irish Life GAA Healthy Club Programme (or a  return ratio of 19:1). Results show significant health and wellbeing gains for  participants, including: 

• increases in physical activity (10-25%) 

• adopting of healthier behaviours (40%) 

• starting new hobbies (17%) and friendships (51%) 

• improvements in life satisfaction, connectedness to other people and the  community  

The Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs Programme supports GAA clubs in becoming hubs for  health by delivering to their members and community opportunities that reflect the  national policy agenda for sport, physical activity, mental health, and preventative  health. It began in 2013 as a pilot involving 16 clubs and engaged 447 clubs by 2023. It  is supported by Irish Life (proud partners since 2015), as well as Healthy Ireland, the HSE, National Office for Suicide Prevention (NOSP), and the Tomar Trust.  

In 2021, the GAA commissioned Just Economics to carry out a SROI analysis of the  Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs Programme. The evaluation followed a mixed-methods  study design based on the SROI framework. SROI is a methodology that compares the  social, economic, and environmental value of a programme with its cost to estimate  the social return. In 2022/23 the Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs Programme engaged 447  clubs and involved 1,912 volunteers who contributed 102,292 hours annually, valued  at €1.1m using the 2022 minimum wage. These volunteers organised 2,389 activities  accessed 184,598 times by 92,299 individuals. Activities are spread across six areas: physical activity (44%), community development (24%), diversity and inclusion (9%),  mental fitness (10%), healthy eating (7%), substance use/gambling awareness (6%). 

The evaluation inferred benefits of €620,000 to our health services from changes in  the service use because of individuals’ participation in the Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs  Programme. For the HSE/NOSP, which contributes €140,000 of funding, the return  from these savings is 4.4:1. 

The Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs Programme also brings a range of benefits to the GAA  and clubs participating in the programme, including greater involvement by  participants (joining their club, taking their children to training or attending games),  recruiting new members and volunteers, and improved reputation/goodwill.  Demographic data shows that the programme engages an equal mix of men and  women and is attracting participation from outside the GAA core base.  

Participating clubs reported:  

• beneficial changes in policies and procedures such as smoke and vape  free venue. 

• healthy eating at training and after games. 

• increases in the proportion of clubs that consider their club to be  welcoming, representative of the community and well-utilised. 

• Some improvement in the ease at which volunteers are  recruited/retained (although both remain a challenge). 

For volunteers, 89% were satisfied with their volunteering experience and there was  an indicated increase in life satisfaction. They also report higher levels of community  connectedness and connection to other people than at baseline. 25% of volunteers  had no previous involvement with the GAA and many started out as participants,  suggesting that the programme is operating as a gateway for new volunteers. Dr. Eilis  Lawlor of Just Economics noted that “What the Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs  Programme shows is that the right activities, targeted in the right way, can get people  taking part in physical activity that is so important for their health and wellbeing.” 

Recommendations within the report include increased funding and scaling up of the  HCP, with targeted support to enable the programme target more minority groups  including BAME communities (Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnicities).  

The Irish Life GAA Healthy Club Programme is emblematic of the direction of travel for  the GAA in 21st century Ireland. It aims to be an inclusive, progressive, and dynamic  programme that builds social capital and changes health and wellbeing behaviours by starting where people are at.

The GAA is currently welcoming expressions of interest to join the next phase of the Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs programme from clubs across the family of Gaelic Games.  Interested clubs must complete this form https://healthyclubs.gaa.ie/ . You will  receive a subsequent application form which must be completed, signed by your club  secretary, and submitted by January 5, 2024.  

For more information regarding the Irish Life GAA Healthy Clubs Programme please  visit https://www.gaa.ie/my-gaa/community-and-health/


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