
Movement Identity turns injuries, surgery, rehab, training, readiness, testing, and return-to-work context into a person-owned Recovery Passport. Athletes keep the record. Clinicians, PTs, teams, trainers, agents, and facilities receive scoped, source-labeled credentials for review.
MI is not asking every doctor, PT, team, trainer, school, or facility to abandon their systems. It gives the person one source-labeled body record and turns each important episode into a credential that can be shared safely.

The product has to feel unavoidable because each participant gets a real job done: athletes keep the record, clinics and facilities package progress, clinicians review context, teams reduce blind spots, and families or agents see controlled proof without taking over the private file.
Serious injuries create a record across surgeons, PTs, trainers, teams, imaging, testing, phone data, and memory. The problem is not that data does not exist. The problem is that nobody owns the full recovery story when the next clinical or career decision depends on it.
MI can reference clinical categories and workflows publicly, while individual surgeon or clinic names stay private until there is explicit permission. The pilot asks clinicians to shape the guardrails before real PHI or live patient workflows.
Request pilot reviewA first-time visitor should understand the product in one flow: see the readiness report, understand the recovery credential network, review the proof, then request a small observational pilot.
Clinician-directed. Athlete-owned. MI does not diagnose, prescribe, clear, or replace clinician judgment.
A source-labeled weekly view with confidence, uncertainty, and clinician review prompts.
Open sample report →02Understand the credentialEvery injury, strain, surgery, training block, or return-to-work case becomes a person-owned evidence packet.
Open credentials →03Review the recovery proofA demo-safe case study showing why surgery-aware recovery memory matters between visits.
Open case study →04Request a pilotA small observational workflow with opt-in athletes, no PHI through public forms, and clinician-directed guardrails.
Start pilot intake →The product feels like infrastructure when every signal keeps its source, confidence, uncertainty, permission, and review state.
It is the Recovery Passport and credential layer between existing systems. The Passport keeps the record person-owned; credentials give authorized reviewers a cleaner way to inspect what changed.
Movement Identity turns meaningful injury, surgery, rehab, training, and return-to-work episodes into source-labeled credentials owned by the person.
The Passport organizes PT notes, Apple Health, force plates, GPS, video, strength, speed, clinician context, and review notes into one timeline with source labels and permissions.
Surgeons, PTs, teams, trainers, agents, schools, and performance staff get scoped views with purpose, expiration, revocation, and an audit trail.
MI organizes recovery context for review. It does not diagnose, prescribe, clear participation, auto-progress protocols, or replace clinician judgment.
The Passport is for the moments that can change opportunity: surgery consults, PT handoffs, transfer intake, combine prep, contract questions, and return-to-performance review.

Instead of screenshots, memory, and scattered portals, the athlete carries one source-labeled timeline for what happened, what changed, what was reviewed, and who can see it.

Contracts, scholarships, tryouts, insurance conversations, and roster decisions need credible context, not vague recovery claims.

Doctors, PTs, trainers, and teams can review the permitted view without chasing files or asking the athlete to retell everything.

Share by role and purpose. Set expiration. Revoke access. See the audit trail when someone opens the Passport.
Movement Identity helps each stakeholder save time, protect value, reduce uncertainty, or create a better service without taking control of the athlete's full private record.
Clinician-directed. Athlete-owned. MI does not diagnose, prescribe, clear, or replace clinician judgment.
Carry injury, surgery, rehab, testing, readiness, medication/TUE, and training history across teams, schools, clinics, and career moves.
See the permitted timeline, sources, restrictions, and open questions before wasting visit time reconstructing the past.
Use a clean, scoped proof packet when recovery status affects contracts, workouts, guarantees, insurance, or team interest.
Review only the granted availability and performance context without pulling uncontrolled private medical data into team systems.
Turn strength, speed, force, workload, and consistency into a premium progress record members can keep.
Track what was shared, what changed, what is uncertain, and when the care team should review next.
Canada already has clinic software, imaging portals, wearables, force plates, team systems, and training apps. The missing layer is the athlete-owned Movement ID that connects the fragments without forcing everyone into one vendor.
MI gives the athlete a portable recovery Passport they can grant across clinicians, PTs, teams, and trainers.
MI turns surgery, imaging references, rehab notes, symptoms, and objective data into one source-labeled timeline.
MI protects athlete ownership and creates permissioned views when the athlete changes teams, schools, or staff.
MI preserves the context, confidence, source, review status, and access rights around each performance signal.
MI turns progress into a premium Passport members can keep, share, and use beyond one facility.
MI becomes recovery memory: what happened, what changed, what was shared, and what needs clinician review.
The first wedge is the injured athlete's Movement Passport. The expansion path is the athlete-owned data trust network for recovery, performance, medication/TUE documentation, and clinically reviewed sharing.
Athlete data lives everywhere. The Passport makes it useful without making it uncontrolled.

Scores and reports are decision support inside a broader person-owned Passport: source-labeled data, confidence, uncertainty, role permissions, and clinician review.
Surgery, restrictions, PT notes, symptoms, and protocol phase stay attached to the athlete timeline for clinician review.
Apple Health, phone gait, check-ins, sleep, walking dose, video, and readiness create continuity between visits.
Catapult/GPS, force plate, speed, strength, workload, and testing history keep the athlete anchored to their own baseline.

A dashboard that turns post-op chaos into organized context. Red means review the source data. Green means no immediate review flag. Your staff sees the routine signals; clinicians make the decisions.

No more calling the surgeon's office to ask about restrictions. No more guessing at the protocol. Open the patient's file — the surgical findings, the clinician-directed protocol, the current phase, and every daily check-in are right there.
| Exercise | Sets | Reps | L | R | LSI | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wall DF stretch | 3 | 30s | 10° | 14° | 71% | Good |
| SL balance | 3 | 30s | 22s | 30s | 73% | Fair |
| Calf raises (bilat) | 3 | 15 | 12 | 15 | 80% | Good |
| Banded dorsiflexion | 3 | 12 | 8° | 12° | 67% | Watch |
Return-to-activity discussions often rely on fragmented follow-up data. MI makes the evidence easier to review: surgical findings, daily movement data, source labels, uncertainty, and the athlete's own performance baseline in one scoped view.
Every injured player can have a scoped recovery view: readiness trends, milestone context, and review flags. Regardless of which surgeon operated or where the athlete is rehabbing.
Catapult GPS data and force plate testing from healthy seasons become the recovery target. Track against THEIR numbers, not generic benchmarks.
Surgeon, PT, athletic trainer, performance staff, and team physician can see the same granted context. Fewer conflicting conversations based on different information.
Permissioned recovery reports can help organize opportunity conversations without turning private body data into uncontrolled files.
CSV import for any system. API available for custom integrations.
The athlete owns the Passport. Clinicians remain responsible for diagnosis, treatment, protocol changes, and return decisions.
Designed for encrypted storage, role-based access, audit trails, and production legal/security review before real PHI.
Designed to map Passport events, clinical context, and audit metadata toward standard healthcare data workflows.
Recovery summaries must cite sources, show confidence, preserve uncertainty, and route progression-sensitive questions to clinicians.
Athletes train, get hurt, recover, transfer, and return across different teams, clinics, devices, and staff. Movement Identity gives that body history a trusted place to live without replacing clinician judgment.
Founder athletes, training groups, PTs, clinics, teams, and Canada recovery partners can help define the trusted record before it expands across orthopedic populations.
Open serious pilot intake