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Army Quickly Expanding Holistic Health and Fitness Teams Following Promising Early Results

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Army Quickly Expanding Holistic Health and Fitness Teams Following Promising Early Results

The Army is fast-tracking the expansion of its Holistic Health and Fitness, or H2F, program as early results show soldiers in brigades recover faster, shoot better and have higher performance on critical fitness tests with the assistance.

The service began fielding roughly 20-person H2F teams to brigades in 2021, providing 28 brigades with coaches and experts on strength training, sleep, physical therapy, nutrition, postpartum recovery and mental health. By the end of this year, the Army is aiming for 50 brigades and hopes to expand that to 111 brigades by 2027, or about half the active-duty force — a goal originally set for 2030.

The H2F teams will also be integrated into some National Guard and reserve units throughout the decade. The new fitness resources will also come with a significant investment in gym equipment for the units.

Read Next: Considering Fat-Loss Supplements? New Military Study Finds Many Are Not What They Seem.

“New weapons systems are pointless if you don’t have the soldier to man them,” Col. Jason Faulkenberry, the H2F program director, told Military.com. “I love seeing this investment in soldiers because we know soldiers will always be used in any future conflict, versus investing in a technology that may or may not be used.”

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Internal data over the past three years shows promising results.

Behavioral health issues in units with H2F teams are down 14% compared to the rest of the Army, according to data provided by the service. In addition, musculoskeletal injuries are down about 30%.

The service also saw increases in the rate of soldiers passing the Army Combat Fitness Test, or ACFT; a reduction in substance abuse; and even an uptick in troops qualifying as experts in rifle marksmanship.

The positive results come amid a rise in overweight soldiers and musculoskeletal injuries in the Army. The H2F teams are efforts Army leaders have long said are obvious steps forward, setting up a structure that civilians outside of the service probably assume would already be in place.

Until now, it hasn’t been easy for a soldier in the conventional Army to get plans from a formally trained coach on improving specific parts of their fitness test, or seek counsel on improving their diet — resources that the special operations community has enjoyed for years.

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Beyond the new initiative, the Army has made strides on how it keeps its troops fit for combat in recent years, with the new ACFT being at the center of that effort.

But the H2F teams and the corresponding doctrine view fitness as intertwined with metrics such as sleep, mental health, nutrition and spiritual health.

“It’s not the equipment I get excited about, it’s the subject-matter experts that come with the equipment,” Sergeant Major of the Army Michael Weimer said at a conference on the H2F program Tuesday. “To be honest with you, later in life I found the importance of the mental and spiritual component. The longer you do this job, the longer those will be at the forefront of your mind. Then the magic pillar — sleep.”

Related: Secretary Wormuth Wants the Army Combat Fitness Test to Stay as Congress Debates Its Fate

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Fitness

Taylor Swift’s fitness strategy that made 632 days long Eras Tour possible: Her exercise routine to stay energized

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Taylor Swift’s fitness strategy that made 632 days long Eras Tour possible: Her exercise routine to stay energized
Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour was a feat few artists could imagine. Spanning 632 days from March 2023 to December 2024, the tour included 149 shows across five continents and became the highest-grossing tour in history. Behind the glittering performances, Swift relied on an intense and meticulously planned exercise routine to sustain the stamina required for her marathon three-and-a-half-hour concerts.

Preparing for a Physical Marathon

Before the tour began, Swift recognized the physical challenge she was about to face. “I never would’ve believed you if you told me we were doing a three-and-a-half-hour show. Saying it is one thing, doing it is another,” she admitted in the Disney+ docuseries The End of an Era. For comparison, her longest previous show had lasted just two hours and 15 minutes.

To meet these demands, Swift began training six months ahead of her first rehearsal. Her daily treadmill sessions mirrored the tempo of the songs she would perform live, with faster tracks prompting running and slower songs calling for brisk walks or light jogging. “You just don’t want them to see you panting,” she explained to TIME.

Strength and Conditioning Regimen

While cardio built endurance, strength training ensured she could perform high-energy choreography without fatigue. Under the guidance of longtime trainer Kirk Myers, Swift tackled exercises such as battle ropes, medicine ball throws, assisted pull-ups, sledgehammer workouts, leg raises, and Russian twists. Myers described her as “the most resilient person I have ever met,” highlighting her ability to persevere through challenging workouts.

Swift’s humor surfaced even during difficult exercises. “In no way do I ever apply this … at any point in the show, I just want to flag that as I do every time I have to do pull-ups. Strong dislike. Two thumbs down,” she said, referring to resistance band-assisted pull-ups. She jokingly attributed her increasing strength to “all the pent-up rage and resentment” she felt toward the moves.

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Dance Training and On-Stage Precision

Beyond the gym, Swift committed three months to dance rehearsals with choreographer Mandy Moore to ensure every move was second nature. “I wanted to be so over-rehearsed that I could be silly with the fans, and not lose my train of thought,” she shared with TIME. The precision extended to rapid costume changes, often completed in under 1 minute and 15 seconds, with the fastest taking just 39 seconds.

Swift ran an estimated eight miles per show while performing over 40 songs that spanned her musical eras. High-cardio sections, including the 1989 and Reputation sets, were particularly demanding. Yet she described the physical challenge as secondary to the personal purpose the tour provided, especially during a period marked by two breakups.

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I’ve been doing this standing exercise for six months and it’s transformed my core strength

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I’ve been doing this standing exercise for six months and it’s transformed my core strength

I’ve been working out for years and I can do sit-ups in my sleep—but I still struggle to activate my core.

I’ve always found it difficult to build strength in this area, until a trainer recommended trying a standing exercise called the Pallof press.

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Body awareness is fundamental to longevity, according to an expert trainer—here’s how to improve yours

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Body awareness is fundamental to longevity, according to an expert trainer—here’s how to improve yours

For most of us, the way to increase your chances of living for longer in good health is pretty straightforward.

Strength training, cardio work and flexibility routines can all improve your longevity, but according to trainer Eloise Skinner, there’s something else that’s fundamental to aging well: body awareness.

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