Last summer, the Air Force
Chief of Staff praised his services combat record
in Iraq and overall performance but found weakness
in one area.
All of us can agree that we were disappointed
with the [physical] fitness standards we found when
we came
into the operational Air Force, said Gen. John
P. Jumper. We expected to be required to sustain
the standards required in basic training, the Air
Force Academy, ROTC, or Officer Training School.
Then, the Chief made his point. Lets not
disappoint ourselves any longer.
True to his word, Jumper was soon releasing a new
fitness program, one that gets back to the basics
of running,
sit-ups, and push-ups.
The new approach comprises:
- A tougher daily physical fitness regimen for basic
trainees.
- New fitness tests for all members of the force.
- New demands on commanders and senior NCOs to make
sure the members of their units meet the new
standards.
The more demanding training took effect at Lackland
AFB, Tex., last October. Plans called for USAF to
launch a new fitness test for the rest of the force
this month.
It will be phased in over a number of months.
The drive to improve fitness stems, at least in part,
from harsh physical demands of recent operations.
We deploy to all regions of the world, said
Jumper. Airmen are living in tent cities and
working on flight lines in extremes of temperatures.
Some
of our airmen today are operating from inside Iraq,
subject
to attack, and could be called upon to help defend
the base, a trend that will surely increase in
the growing expeditionary nature of our business. The
amount of energy we devote to our fitness programs
is not
consistent with the growing demands of our warrior
culture.
Physical Readiness
Maj. Lisa Schmidt, the Air Force surgeon generals
chief of health promotion operations, noted how
increased fitness will help airmen cope with extreme
conditions. Its
just one of the benefits of exercise, she
said. Temperature-extremes
tolerance, fatigue tolerance, preventing back
injuries, preventing illness, ... even something
such as coming
down with a simple cold that can take you out
of the work site for a day or two. Youre
just more resistant to that, because youve
built up that immunity.
At Lackland, the old physical conditioning program
for basic trainees has been renamed physical
readiness training.
The new curriculum follows the general outline
of the old one but adds a second confidence-course
run,
a
2.5-mile formation run for graduating airmen,
monthly fitness competitions among training squadrons,
and special recognition of the most physically
fit airmen
in each graduating class.
The weekly regimen includes three days of aerobic
running and three days of muscular endurance
training. The
runs involve 40-minute sessions of group-paced
running, self-paced running, and six 30-second-
sprint interval
runs separated by brisk walking. Each week, trainees
are timed on a two-mile run.
The endurance training lasts 48 minutes and includes
a circuit of crunches, leg lifts, push-ups, flutter
kicks, and pull-ups, all designed to improve
upper body and abdominal strength. (Crunches
are like
sit-ups but with the knees bent to the chest.)
The new fitness test for the general Air Force
population also will merge new elements with
old. Schmidt said
there are four componentsa 1.5-mile run,
a body composition measurement, a one-minute
push-up
test,
and a one-minute crunch test. Those who participate
are scored from zero to 100.
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| Airmen in Southwest Asia begin a group fitness
run on Oct. 29. Deployments to regions of extreme
temperatures are one reason USAF has instituted
a tougher physical fitness program. |
Although the new program restores the 1.5-mile
run for most members, there will be provision
for excusing
some, Schmidt said, basically for safety reasons.
The Air Force is especially concerned about persons
with
cardiac problems.
How members do on the test will determine what
they must do next. Those who score poorly, said
Schmidt,
will go to the health and wellness center and
get more work. Some will be sent to take a healthy
living workshop,
focused on changing diet and other behavior patterns.
Those who score below 70, however, also will
get more individualized fitness prescriptions
that address
their
specific needs.
Health and wellness centers are under base medical
group commanders and staffed by medical personnel.
Fitness centers have evolved from the old base
gyms into conditioning facilities that rely heavily
on
mechanical bodybuilding machines. The centers
are staffed through
the Air Force Services Agency. The two may be
colocated or in separate buildings.
Fitness training has gone through a succession
of changes, not all of them for the better. During
World
War II,
members received heavy doses of conditioning
when they were in basic training or cadet status.
After
that,
however, units often did little more than provide
sports equipment and urge members to exercise
on their own.
Since most members were in their teens or barely
beyond them and were in only for the duration
of the war,
there was little attention given to long-term
fitness training.
As USAF matured, it took more interest in physical
conditioning. It was particularly concerned about
aircrew members handling aircraft that flew progressively
longer,
higher, and faster. Periodically, leaders would
worry, too, about overweight and out-of-shape
NCOs in operations
support skills and call for more rigorous exercise.
Coopers Revolution
In the late 1950s, a medical officer had an experience
that would influence his approach to fitness
and change the habits of millions of Americans.
Flight
Surgeon
Kenneth H. Cooper was still under 30 when he
experienced an irregular heartbeat while waterskiing.
Although
he had run track in college, Cooper had been
relatively inactive since. He was overweight
and out of shape.
He took himself in hand and, within six months,
lost 40 pounds. Less than a year later, he ran
his first
Boston Marathon.
Assigned to the Aerospace Medical Laboratory
at Brooks AFB, Tex., Cooper helped develop a
conditioning
program
for NASA astronauts. He also became convinced
of the importance of fitness in preventing and
treating
heart
disease. He developed exercises to promote better
health. In the late 1960s, he coined the term aerobics and
used it in the title for his first book. Two
years later, he left service as a lieutenant
colonel and
founded what has become the sprawling Cooper
Aerobics Center and Cooper Institute in Dallas.
The Air Force incorporated into its fitness testing
program many elements of aerobics, including
the annual 1.5-mile run. By the early 1990s,
however,
several
airmen had suffered heart attacks or injuries
during the annual test, and the service switched
to the
safer cycle ergometry test.
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| Two airmen at Kunsan AB, South Korea, wear bomb
suits during a PT session designed to to test their
ability to work in the suits as well as their fitness.
They also ran the 1.5-mile portion of the new fitness
test in the 65-pound suits. |
Over the years, the mission of improving fitness
also has changed. Up until the early 1990s,
the fitness test was part of the personnel program,
much like the
weight management program, noted Schmidt. It
has just been in the more recent years that the
surgeon general has taken ownership of the actual
instruction.
In announcing the new tests, Jumper said it was
time to change the attitude that was costing
the service
valuable manpower. Every year, he
said, we
muster out about 400 people from our Air Force
because of fitness issues.
Jumper added that fitness should also be an area
of concern for Air Force civilian employees.
Battle of the Bulge
Of the four elements in the new fitness test,
the measurement of body composition may be the
toughest
for some members
because it will require the most work to show
any improvement. The actual measurement is deceptively
simple. Schmidt
said, Its a single abdominal measurement
with a tape measure, independent of height or
age.
The test is based on the recommendations of the
National Institutes of Health, which maintains
that males
with an abdominal circumference greater than
40 inches are
at a high health risk and at 35.5 inches, they
are at a moderate health risk. For females, 32.5
inches
is the moderate risk point and more than 35 inches
is high risk.
If you are over those, remarked Schmidt, then
you go to that body-composition improvement
program.
The actual scoring of body composition and
other factors will be on a numerical scale.
The aerobic
fitness component
includes the 1.5-mile run. (The run time, based
on research from Cooper Clinic, also can be
equated to the VO-2 score from the bicycle
test.)
On the aerobic fitness test, one can score
between zero and 50 points. Scores on body
composition
can range from zero to 30 points. One can get
up to 10
points, each, for push-ups and crunches.
You will notice that 50 points go to aerobics
fitness, because we know thats the best single
indicator for overall fitness, said Schmidt.
In contrast, there is little research to
help the Air Force determine the fitness
component
of push-ups
and
crunches.
USAF has published separate charts for
males and females, dividing them into five-year
age increments.
A male
under 25, for example, will have to complete
the run in 9.36 minutes or score at least
54 on the
bike test
to earn the maximum of 50 points. To gain
top points on the other components, he
will
have
to have an
abdominal circumference of 32.5 inches
or less, do 62 or more
push-ups in one minute, and do 55 or more
crunches in a minute.
A male over 55 still will have to have
a 32.5-inch waist. However, he is allowed
more
than 11
minutes for the run and can score as low
as 47 on the
bike for a top aerobics score. He can max
the other
scores with only 35 push-ups and 41 crunches
in one-minute
periods.
Women are allowed more time for the run
than men in the same age brackets and are
required
to do
fewer push-ups and crunches to win the
same number of points.
In the body composition component, however,
women of
all ages must have smaller measurements.
A waist circumference of 29.5 inches or
less is needed
for top points.
Can You Compensate?
If a persons body composition measurement is
too high, will it be possible to make up
for it by scoring well on the rest of the factors
and still
pass?
Schmidt has doubts.
You would probably have to do very well in all
the fitness components once you go over the 40 inches, she
said. But lets say you have
a 38-inch waist. As long as you do well
on the fitness components, you
could get a good score. So there are
ways that those borderline people could
do it, but once they get over
that 40, its going to be a lot
more difficult unless they are very fit.
We havent
yet seen where there was a very fit male
who had
a waist over
40 inches. You can just see that their
fitness scores are as low as their waistlines
are
high.
Another major change in USAFs approach to fitness
will be how it holds members to account.
In the past, the service laid down guidelines but left
it pretty
much up to the member to follow them.
As Schmidt said, Our
Air Force instruction said that you should
have 30 minutes of cardio training or
aerobic fitness
training
to include such things as jogging, biking,
swimming. So there are some examples
there. And the instruction
said that it should include strength
training, either machine-based or calisthenics-based
type muscular
fitness and flexibility. That was in
there,
but it was up to
the individual what he or she did.
Now, however, unit commanders will be
held responsible for their troops. Jumper
said, We are planning
... to put responsibility for PT in the
chain of command, not with the medical
community or the commanders
support staff. I expect this effort to
be led from the top, starting with commanders
and senior
NCOs,
and I expect those who have trouble meeting
the standards to be helped by others
in their
units
until they
do meet the standard.
The Chief gave this example: While we have weight
and body fat standards that we must meet,
there will be some, weightlifters in particular, who
may be perfectly
fit but not meet these standards. This
is where I expect commanders to step in and make a
decision. Everyone
will have to pass the commanders
eyeball test about how fit we are to
wear the uniform.
The testing and the remedial efforts
will be demanding, but Schmidt said she
thinks
that
supervisors wont
begrudge the time members have to take
off to comply.
I havent really heard a lot of talk about
the duty time, she said.
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