Army discusses future of Holistic Health and Fitness at symposium

By Jonathan DahmsMay 2, 2024

Army discusses future of Holistic Health and Fitness at symposium
Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer presents the keynote address during the Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness Symposium April 30, 2024 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center in Hampton, Va. Weimer emphasized the importance for leaders to embrace and model H2F and to help make it part of the “basics” of an individual Soldier’s responsibility. (Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines) VIEW ORIGINAL

HAMPTON, Va. — Leaders from across the U.S. Army, industry and academia descended on the Hampton Roads Convention Center April 29 to May 1 for the 2024 Holistic Health and Fitness Symposium.

More than 1,200 registered attendees and 55 vendors in the human performance industry came together to discuss the future of the H2F program that has revolutionized how the Army views individual Soldier health, fitness and readiness.

The event featured presentations from Army leaders and H2F domain subject matter experts from the health and fitness community, industry and academia and breakout sessions on each of the H2F readiness domains: physical, mental, nutritional, spiritual and sleep readiness.

The keynote speaker for the Symposium, Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer, stressed the importance of leaders modeling the principles of H2F to help it be engrained in the Army’s fitness culture.

“This needs to be part of your basics of what it means to be a warfighter,” said Weimer. This isn’t ‘I didn’t take the physical therapist or the strength coach with me.’ This is ‘I’m surrounded by non-commissioned officers who have bought into this, believe it, they’re modelling it, so therefore now I know it’s a basic responsibility of the individual Soldier.’ That’s the goal. That’s where we are trying to go.”

Maj. Gen. John Kline, U.S. Army Center for Initial Military Training commanding general and the Army’s proponent for H2F, provided an update on the fielding of H2F Performance Teams to brigades and expressed the importance of a data management system.

Army discusses future of Holistic Health and Fitness at symposium
Maj. Gen. John Kline presents opening remarks and introduces Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer during the Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness Symposium April 30, 2024 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center in Hampton, Va. Kline highlighted progress made in implementing the H2F system and some near term priorities like conducting pilot tests on an APP and data management system as part of an ongoing “wearables” study. (Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines) VIEW ORIGINAL

“Our goal is to have 50 brigades outfitted with H2F teams by the end of this fiscal year,” said Kline. “As we look to the future, one of the larger initiatives we are working is an H2F data management system. We’ll be conducting two pilot programs for testing and will be working with PEO Soldier on the potential acquisition of a mobile app and data management system for the H2F program.”

The data management system, Kline stressed, is the best way to expand H2F access at scale, to include the Army Reserve and National Guard, who have the challenge of a dispersed forces with limited touchpoints in implementing H2F at their community-based locations.

Maj. Gen. Bob Harter, commander of the U.S. Army Reserve’s 81st Readiness Division, which is running an H2F pilot program for the USAR, highlighted some of the early success he has had with a train-the-trainer team he used to push out to subordinate units. They leveraged the Army Reserve Medical Command and created a team that includes a physical therapist, dietician and contracted strength coach, working along with trained H2F Integrators at the unit level.

“I thought I understood fitness, we’ve all been working out our whole lives,” Harter said.” But when I saw what the [H2F Performance] team was doing at Fort Jackson the professionals — the physical therapists, the dieticians and the strength coaches — what they can do on the ground with Soldiers, I’m like, oh man, we need to figure out how to crack this nut for the Army Reserve. When they go out to unit level, you see the difference it has made.”

Army discusses future of Holistic Health and Fitness at symposium
Audience participation was the name of the game at the Army’s Holistic Health and Fitness Symposium held April 29 to May 1, 2024 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center in Hampton, Va. Here, an audience member asks a question after the Sgt. Maj. of the Army’s keynote address. (Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines) VIEW ORIGINAL

The Army Reserve and the National Guard will start fielding a version of H2F Performance Teams in Fiscal Year 2026. Command Sgt. Maj. John Raines, the Army National Guard command sergeant major, said it will be a phased approach so they can assess the program and adjust accordingly.

“When we talk about the human performance teams, the five people we are programmed to bring on board … that’s going to be phased, depending on what state you are in, we’ve got a five-year roll-out plan,” said Raines. “You’ll start seeing our human performance teams come about in Fiscal Year ’26, and every subsequent year after that.”

In a change from the previous H2F Symposiums, the top H2F programs from across the Army were recognized for their performance in categories that included interdisciplinary and each of the five domains of H2F. Those recognized included:

  • Interdisciplinary: 42nd Military Police Brigade, Joint Base Lewis- McChord, Washington
  • Physical domain:  197th Infantry Brigade, Fort Moore, Georgia
  • Nutrition domain:  17th Field Artillery Brigade, Joint Base Lewis- McChord, Washington
  • Mental domain:  1st Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Liberty, North Carolina
  • Sleep domain:  82nd Combat Aviation Brigade, Fort Liberty, North Carolina
  • Spiritual domain:  193rd Infantry Brigade, Fort Jackson, South Carolina
The Army recognized its top-notch Holistic Health and Fitness practitioners during its H2F Symposium April 30, 2024 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center in Hampton, Va. Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer, the keynote speaker for the event, and Maj. Gen. John Kline, U.S. Army Center for Initial Military Training Command and host of the event, stand with some of the H2F programs who were recognized during the event. (U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines)
The Army recognized its top-notch Holistic Health and Fitness practitioners during its H2F Symposium April 30, 2024 at the Hampton Roads Convention Center in Hampton, Va. Sgt. Maj. of the Army Michael Weimer, the keynote speaker for the event, and Maj. Gen. John Kline, U.S. Army Center for Initial Military Training Command and host of the event, stand with some of the H2F programs who were recognized during the event. (U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines) (Photo Credit: U.S. Army photo by Jean Wines) VIEW ORIGINAL

Dr. Andrew Thompson, a research physiologist with CIMT, also gave an update on some of the latest statistics that compare H2F resourced units to comparable non-H2F resourced units. Data suggests that the increased access to care and the preventative nature of H2F results in less musculoskeletal injuries, less behavioral health profiles and less non-deployable Soldiers.

“Units with H2F are helping Soldiers get back into the fight faster and become deployable,” said Thompson. “When you do the math … H2F in the total Army would add an entire division moving from the red to the green in readiness every year.”

“In summary, units with H2F have better injury control, better return to duty outcomes,” stated Thompson. “The Soldiers have less negative behavioral health issues, they’re shooting better, they’re moving better and they are more fit and they are increasing they’re deployability at a faster rate.”

Brig. Gen. Deydre Teyhen, the Defense Health Network director for the National Capital Region, noted those H2F teams are also doing this with about one third of their formation changing out every year, making those results even more impressive.

Weimer may have summed it up best when he described why H2F is so important to the Army as it prepares for future conflicts.

“We do hard things in the Army,” Weimer said. “H2F exists so that we can be ready to do the hard things that the nation needs and is expecting us to do.”