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Monte Ward, ACSM VP of Government Affairs
4 min read

HHS Re-establishes Presidential Youth Fitness Test; ACSM Highlights Implementation Science 

On June 29, 2026, Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced the restoration of the Presidential Youth Fitness Test (PYFT). The initiative aims to re-establish standardized, national physical performance benchmarks within the K-12 education system as part of federal preventive health efforts. 

The policy rollout utilizes a phased implementation strategy, launching initially across 161 schools located on U.S. military installations. In tandem with the testing protocols, HHS launched an interactive data portal (whitehouse.gov/fitness) to provide educators, clinicians, and families with age- and sex-specific fitness guidelines. 

This policy shift has prompted renewed focus within the exercise science community regarding optimal methodologies for assessing and developing physical literacy in youth populations. 

The PYFT framework evaluates markers of youth metabolic and cardiovascular health. The physical benchmarks measure three primary components of fitness: 

  • Cardiorespiratory Endurance: Aerobic capacity assessments (e.g., timed mile run or multi-stage shuttle run) 
  • Musculoskeletal Strength and Endurance: Upper body and core tracking (e.g., push-ups, pull-ups, or timed planks)
  • Flexibility: Joint range of motion assessments (e.g., sit-and-reach test)

In an official statement addressing the potential rollout, ACSM along with partner organizations strongly supported national efforts to elevate awareness and mobilize resources for youth physical activity but emphasized that the evaluation of youth fitness must remain grounded in evidence-based, modern exercise science. 

ACSM underscored that over several decades, research and practice have evolved away from performance and norm-based fitness testing toward health-related physical fitness approaches. These contemporary models focus on key components—such as cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength, flexibility, and body composition—using criterion-referenced standards linked directly to positive health outcomes rather than peer comparison. 

Moving forward, ACSM advocates that youth fitness assessments serve strictly as educational tools within school physical education programs. To achieve meaningful public health outcomes, these benchmarks must be paired with comprehensive fitness education, supportive instructional resources, and clear communication with families. ACSM remains committed to working collaboratively with policymakers and administration officials to ensure federal youth fitness initiatives prioritize long-term clinical health outcomes and secure adequate funding for physical education infrastructure. 

White House Launches “Freedom 250” National Park Campaign 

In a joint initiative tied to the ongoing U.S. semiquincentennial celebrations, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the White House have officially launched the “Freedom 250” National Park Campaign. The multi-agency policy framework formally designates physical activity as a frontline pillar of federal preventive care, with HHS leadership explicitly promoting “nature-based physical activity” to address rising national rates of metabolic dysfunction and mental health disorders. 

The campaign utilizes the U.S. National Park system to host structured public events designed to demonstrate the physiological and psychological impacts of outdoor exercise. This directive marks a significant shift in federal public health messaging, moving toward green-space utilization as an accessible, non-pharmacological health intervention. 

The American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) supports the scientific foundation of nature-based movement. Decades of peer-reviewed data published across ACSM journals confirm that moving physical activity outdoors—often termed “green exercise”—yields distinct clinical advantages over indoor sedentary or simulated behaviors. 

On the surface, outdoor physical fitness and national park utilization enjoy broad, bipartisan support among lawmakers and the public. However, the political friction lies in the funding mechanics. The campaign launches amidst tense House and Senate Appropriations Committee debates regarding the FY 2027 budget. While the administration is pushing for substantial funding allocations dedicated to MAHA lifestyle and physical activity interventions across HHS, other lawmakers are scrutinizing whether these initiatives will replicate existing CDC chronic disease programs or result in funding cuts to traditional public health surveillance. 

ACSM will continue to closely monitor the implementation of the “Freedom 250” National Park Campaign.  Furthermore, ACSM remains actively engaged in federal advocacy efforts to ensure that new promotional campaigns do not overshadow or diminish the baseline infrastructure of American health surveillance and physical activity research. ACSM is working directly with congressional appropriators to defend and secure adequate funding for vital physical activity, chronic disease prevention, and clinical research programs housed across HHS, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). ACSM continues to emphasize that federal fitness initiatives must be anchored in peer-reviewed science and supported by robust, sustained federal appropriations to achieve long-term public health outcomes. 

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