When your schedule is full, your health can slip down the priority list. But building better habits doesn’t have to mean adding stress.
As a certified health coach at PartnerMD’s Short Pump office, I work with people every day who want to take control of their health in a way that’s practical and sustainable, even with a full schedule.
The right tools can make it easier to track your wellness, stay motivated, and make steady progress. Below are the tools I often recommend to help patients stay organized, consistent, and focused. These are simple, effective resources I use with patients every day.
Wellness tools give you structure and clarity. They make it easier to track what you're doing and adjust when needed.
They help you:
Stay accountable to your goals.
Measure what's working and what's not.
Stay motivated through small daily wins.
Start with one tool that fits into your routine, then build from there.
If you’re an iPhone user, Apple Health is a great place to start. It pulls data from your phone, connected apps, and devices to give you a broad view of your overall health.
It’s already running in the background on most iPhones, so getting started is as simple as opening the app and checking what’s being tracked.
Features include:
Daily step count, movement, and sleep tracking
Uploading and storing health records from your medical provider
Activity metrics like pace, distance, elevation, and heart rate
Medication tracking with scheduled reminders and dose logging
Menstrual cycle tracking to monitor symptoms and patterns
Integration with other apps and wearables
Sharing activities with friends and family for support and accountability
Coach’s Note:
Apple Health works well as a central hub. Pair it with a wearable or a more specific fitness app to get deeper insight.
For Android users, Google Fit is the most comparable all-in-one wellness app. It was designed in collaboration with the American Heart Association and the World Health Organization to promote heart-healthy habits.
Features include:
Tracks steps, active minutes, and heart points
Monitors heart rate and sleep when paired with a wearable
Integrates with many third-party fitness and nutrition apps
Offers activity goals and progress summaries
Simple interface for daily check-ins
Coach’s Note:
Google Fit is easy to use and syncs well with Android-friendly wearables. It’s a good place to start if you want a broad view of your wellness habits.
Whether you’re focused on daily step goals or outdoor workouts, these apps help you stay active in different ways.
Strava
Best for running, cycling, or walking outdoors. Tracks distance, pace, and elevation, and adds motivation through challenges, clubs, and leaderboards. Syncs with most fitness trackers.
Pedometer
A simpler option that counts steps using your phone’s sensors. Tracks distance and estimated calories and helps you hit daily movement goals without extra devices.
Coach’s Note:
Strava is great if you enjoy structured workouts and community. Pedometer apps are a good option if your goal is simply to move more throughout the day.
Fitness trackers offer a simple way to stay active without carrying your phone. These devices can track your movement, sleep, and more while syncing to your favorite apps.
Here are three wearables I often recommend:
Apple Watch
Works best with iPhones and Apple Health. Tracks workouts, heart rate, movement, sleep, and even detects falls or irregular heart rhythms.
Garmin Watch
A great option for runners, cyclists, or hikers. Offers detailed stats like VO2 max, cadence, elevation gain, and GPS tracking.
Oura Ring
Lightweight and discreet. Focuses on sleep, readiness, and recovery. Tracks sleep stages, heart rate variability, and stress signals.
Coach’s Note:
Pick the device that fits your routine. For fitness tracking and metrics, go with a watch. For recovery and sleep, the Oura Ring is an excellent choice.
Keeping a food journal increases awareness and supports smarter eating decisions. Studies have shown it can also improve weight loss and portion control. A review of 15 studies found that consistent food journaling was strongly associated with greater weight loss across a variety of groups and settings.
One study published in The American Journal of Preventive Medicine reported that participants who tracked their food intake almost daily lost twice as much weight as those who tracked less frequently.
MyFitnessPal
My top choice. Tracks calories, macros, and micronutrients. Syncs with fitness apps and devices to combine activity and nutrition data.
Features include:
Logging meals, snacks, and water
Daily nutrition summaries
Access to recipes and meal ideas
Sharing with friends and family for added motivation
Goal setting for nutrients and calories
Cronometer
Offers precise micronutrient tracking. Ideal if you want to monitor vitamin and mineral intake or follow a specific diet plan.
Lose It!
Simple and streamlined. Good for quick logging without advanced features.
Coach’s Note:
You don’t have to track forever. Even a few weeks of food journaling can reveal helpful patterns.
These tools simplify your wellness routine. They help you track progress, stay consistent, and adjust based on real data.
They give you:
Accountability through daily logs
Motivation by showing visible progress
Structure without requiring extra time
Insight that helps you make smarter choices
You don’t need to track everything at once. Start with one tool that fits your routine. Whether it’s logging meals, wearing a fitness tracker, or counting steps, small steps lead to real progress over time.
At PartnerMD, our certified health coaches work alongside your physician to help you turn information into action. We guide your habits, provide accountability, and help make wellness feel manageable, even with a busy schedule.
Health coaching is included as part of your membership at PartnerMD. If your current primary care experience doesn’t offer the same level of support, it may be time to explore what concierge medicine can do for your long-term health.