Jimmy Andrew from Pulse Fitness. Michael Woodhead catches up with the Scottish entrepreneur behind a growing health empire. "/> Jimmy Andrew from Pulse Fitness. Michael Woodhead catches up with the Scottish entrepreneur behind a growing health empire. " />
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MAKING IT IN GERMANY

HEALTH

Jimmy Andrew: From Scottish miner to Ruhr fitness mogul

The Local's series "Making it in Germany" presents Jimmy Andrew from Pulse Fitness. Michael Woodhead catches up with the Scottish entrepreneur behind a growing health empire.

Jimmy Andrew: From Scottish miner to Ruhr fitness mogul
Photo: Jimmy Andrew

By the time Jimmy Andrew made it to Bochum, the mines were being shut down. But it wasn’t coal that drew the former Scottish miner to the gritty Ruhr Valley.

After following his wife to Germany thirty years ago, he went on to found Pulse Fitness GmbH. From it’s humble beginning in the small back office in her gym, it’s become an international fitness company with turnover topping €5 million last year.

“I think we shall be looking at our best year since the company was founded thirty years ago. The recovery is happening,” he told The Local recently.

But rarely has business been straightforward. “You have to adapt and think on your feet and cope with the unexpected,” said Andrew, who has a phlegmatic approach to life.

He certainly has come a long way from his small mining village in the Scottish lowlands, where had not Margaret Thatcher intervened in his life he would have become a mine manager, played in the local football team and polished his water ski championship trophies at weekends.

Instead, Andrew is the man who brought the spinning health craze to Germany – he imported bikes from Britain selling them by the thousand.

“The UK spinning bike was better made and more innovative than anything the Germans had,” he said.

Coming from East Whitburn, Andrew left school at 16 to work in the mines. His main ambition was to becoming Scottish water ski champion. In 1984 under Thatcher’s mine closures he lost his job. He was 22 with a £6,000 payoff in his pocket.

“I went to Greece with the idea of staying two weeks for water ski training. I stayed three months in all, grew my hair and lost my girlfriend back home,” he said. “Greece changed my life. Coming from a little village in Scotland with only 400 inhabitants to a place where there were Greeks, Germans, Italians, French – I had to learn a lot and adapt.”

So began a life as a professional sportsman and trainer that took him to Kitzbühel in Austria as a ski guide.

Next came Kenya and the French-owned Paradise Ocean Village Club as the Chef de Sport. An idyllic setting, but no nightlife. “Evenings it was all couples and baboons with pink bottoms,” he said ruefully.

For entertainment that involved neither of the above, he went to the German club at the nearby Robinson resort. Here he met a dance choreographer Patricia. They became a couple and married. But Patricia wanted to open her own fitness club in her hometown of Bochum, so they eventually left for Germany.

“I asked myself what does a Scotsman with little German do in Bochum in the Ruhr region,” he joked.

He bought two pieces of equipment for Patricia’s gym ‘Cheers’ and realised from the popularity of the club that the German fitness boom was about to take off.

“All I had was the gym telephone with two lines, one for Cheers the other for Pulse,” he said. “The background noise helped to make everything sound more professional to whoever was on the phone.”

But winning the confidence of German club owners with his ‘Denglish’ was not easy. “Germans tend to buy from Germans. But when it comes down to it, people buy from people. It doesn’t matter what language you speak. If they believe what you are selling is something you totally believe in you’ll get the contract. And you have to like what you are doing otherwise they will see through you,” he said.

Since those days, the fitness market in Germany has grown at an astonishing rate. Analysts estimate the market is worth a potential €550 million year. The German Statistics Office in Wiesbaden reported that fitness training has for the first time become more popular than playing football.

But exports have also been a major reason for the success of Pulse Fitness GmbH and Andrew recently signed a €100,000 landmark deal with a luxury fitness studio in Teheran to supply it with workout equipment.

“My last trip was to Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Syria. The Middle East is a growth area for us,” he said.

Surprisingly for a fitness mogul, Andrew’s many business commitments mean his main exercise is getting in and out of his concours condition classic MG Midget sports car.

Know someone who’s “made it” in Germany? Email us at: [email protected]

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HEALTH

How to find available therapists in Germany

It’s no secret that mental health care can be particularly tricky to access in Germany. Here are some helpful tips for anyone who is struggling to book an appointment for therapy.

How to find available therapists in Germany

The process to find psychotherapy in Germany’s urban centres is arduous – licensed therapists often have impossibly long wait times, and private practices don’t accept public health insurance.

A major reason that public insurance funded mental health care is hard to find in Germany comes down to regulations. Specifically the ‘coverage plan’ (Bedarfsplanung) that basically limits the number of licences available for publicly insured therapists in a region.

Germany’s maddening bureaucracy probably won’t be fixed any time soon. So residents in need of therapy will need to find a way through the system as it is.

So here are a few helpful tips for finding therapists, as well as how publicly insured patients can have private practice therapy costs reimbursed.

Look for therapists enrolled at academies

You’ll probably have a better chance getting an appointment with therapists who are currently in training, because not everyone knows that this option exists.

You can search for “Akademie für Psychotherapie”, to find one in your location. The Berliner Akademie für Psychotherapie, is one in the capital city, for example.

If you arrange an appointment this way, you can expect to be connected with a grad student therapist in training who needs to complete their supervised practice hours. In this case, you would see your therapist as usual, and they will be going through your session with an experienced therapist afterward.

The main advantages to seeking a therapist in training is that it may be cheaper and you can probably more readily find an appointment. A potential disadvantage is that the therapist you’ll be seeing is less experienced. 

But according to a Stockholm University study, student therapists who receive regular feedback from supervisors may be just as effective as licensed therapists at treating patients.

How to get reimbursed for going to a private practice

As mentioned above, therapists covered by public health insurance are few and far between, especially in many urban centres, and therefore regularly come with long wait times. But for those willing to do battle with the bureaucracy, there is an option to have your costs reimbursed for seeing a private practice therapist.

Specifically, public insurance providers are obligated to provide full reimbursement of costs in the event of a “supply emergency”. 

Waiting times of more than three months are considered unreasonable. So generally, patients can claim a supply emergency if they have contacted several therapists, and none of them offered available appointments within that time frame.

But you’ll want to make sure that your process is properly documented so that you won’t be stuck with the out-of-pocket costs.

First, you’ll need to document your need for psychotherapy. To get this, make an appointment for a psychotherapeutic consultation with a practice in your area, and be sure to collect a written recommendation for treatment (a PTV 11 form). 

If you don’t know where to start with this, look to the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (Kassenärztliche Vereinigung) for a database of therapists. You can also call 116 117 or use the 116 117 App.

After you’ve got your PTV 11 certificate, you’ll need to document your futile search for a licensed therapist. To do this, contact at least three to five therapists that have public health insurance approval. Keep a list of the names of therapists you contacted, as well as dates and times of contact and how long the waiting list for treatment is. 

Additionally, you should try to arrange treatment through the aforementioned Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians, and receive confirmation if it’s not possible. So you’ll need to call 116 117, or use the 116 117 App again. But this time go through the process to have them try to find you placement with a therapist. This should take a maximum of four weeks, but rarely happens.

Finally, if you have documented all of the above and have still not found a readily available therapist, then you can seek out a private practice. You’ll need to enroll as a self-paying patient initially, but then you can submit an application for an outpatient reimbursement (Kostenerstattungsverfahren) along with the previously collected certificates and proof of your search. Private practice therapists are usually familiar with this process, and may be able to help you with the application as well.

READ ALSO: What are the main reasons internationals in Germany turn to therapy?

Free phone consultations for students

Students in Berlin can also take advantage of a free 50-minute conversation with a therapist through StudierendenWERK.

For students elsewhere, it’s worth checking what kind of mental health support services your school offers. Many German universities offer mental health support to some extent, and if school counsellors can’t provide the care that you need, they may be able to offer helpful information about where such services are available in your area.

READ ALSO: Here’s how you can get mental health help in English in Germany

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