If your client moves better but you can’t prove it, do you actually have progress? If your client feels stronger but you can’t measure it, do you have any real evidence?
These are uncomfortable questions, but they are essential for any fitness professional looking to bridge the gap between healthcare and fitness. According to Dr. Michael Jones, President of the Medical Exercise Training Institute, simply stating that a client "moves better" or "has less pain" is not enough when communicating with doctors, therapists, and insurance carriers.
If you want to be recognized as a true Medical Exercise Professional rather than just a personal trainer, you must learn to speak the language of healthcare. That language relies on functional outcome measures—your ultimate "currency of trust".
Exchanging Your Currency
Dr. Mike uses a travel analogy to explain this concept: If you travel to Greece to buy a meal or a souvenir, you cannot use US dollars because local vendors cannot deposit them into their banks; you must exchange your money for Euros.
The same applies to the medical and insurance communities. Your subjective fitness jargon (e.g., "the client feels great") is the equivalent of the US dollar in Greece—it won't be accepted. To establish trust and validate your competence, you must exchange those subjective claims for a currency that medical professionals and insurance carriers understand: objective, measurable data.
At its core, the golden rule of medical exercise is this: If it cannot be measured, it cannot be defended. Providing objective data like specific changes in range of motion or balance scores validates the safety of your programming, proves your competence, and can even justify reimbursement from insurance carriers.
The 30-Day Reassessment Standard
Systemizing your data collection is just as important as the data itself. While personal trainers might randomly check strength, a functional specialist establishes a clear timeline.
You should establish your baseline assessment within the first two or three days of working with a new client. From there, reassessments should be performed every 30 days. Why 30 days? In the medical field, 30 days is the standard time period used by physicians to determine if a treatment plan is actually working. By aligning your reassessment schedule with standard medical practices, you prove that your exercise protocols are a vital part of the client's overall medical management.
After your 30-day reassessment, you should send a one-page progress report to the client's physician, therapist, or chiropractor. When a medical provider sees a concise report highlighting undeniable, measurable improvements, it builds massive credibility and often leads to future client referrals.
3 Next Steps to Implement Functional Outcome Measures
To successfully make the shift from trainer to functional specialist, follow these three actionable steps outlined in the sources:
Ready to level up your practice? For step-by-step procedures on checking muscle strength and range of motion, consider downloading the Advanced Medical Exercise Specialist Manual, which includes condition-specific assessment checklists. You can also build your foundation by grabbing the free Medical Exercise Training 101 eBook at met101ebook.com.
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