Recovery intelligence for Canada's MSK and return-to-work gap.
Movement Identity turns injury, surgery, rehab, phone gait, PT, training, and work/sport handoff context into a person-owned Recovery Passport. The deeper category is a recovery credential network for the human body: episode-based evidence packets that authorized reviewers can inspect safely. Athletes prove the wedge first; clinics, rehab groups, schools, teams, and Canadian health-AI programs scale the infrastructure.
The national opportunity is a person-owned recovery record that institutions can trust.
Canada does not need another isolated clinic portal. MI can become the portable Recovery Passport layer for athletes first, then active adults, return-to-work pathways, clinics, training groups, teams, and health AI pilots that need consent, source labels, and human review.

A recovery record owned by the person, readable by the right reviewers.
The Canada opportunity only works if the product is easy to understand: MI is the permissioned record layer for recovery, performance, mobility, and return-to-work/activity context.
The permanent record: injury/surgery context, PT or rehab sessions, check-ins, phone gait trend, progress reports, access grants, and review events.
The readable view: source-labeled recovery, activity, training, testing, readiness, and handoff context organized for authorized reviewers.
A scoped view for a surgeon, PT, trainer, team, school, employer-scoped reviewer, case manager, or care partner with expiration, revocation, and audit history.
MI organizes context for human review. It does not diagnose, prescribe, clear, determine work status, auto-progress protocols, or replace clinician judgment.
Start where the pain is obvious: recovery context gets lost.
Athletes, active adults, clinics, trainers, schools, teams, employers, and case managers all need recovery context, but nobody wants uncontrolled medical files moving everywhere. MI gives the person a Passport and gives each stakeholder a scoped view.
Canada already pays the cost when MSK recovery is fragmented across worker, clinician, rehab, employer, and case manager.
MI makes source-labeled recovery context easier to inspect without making medical, employment, benefit, or clearance decisions.
The record follows the person across teams, clinics, schools, work, and care transitions instead of staying trapped in one system.
The first pilot measures adoption, handoff completeness, time saved, and safety-language quality before claims are made.
Make every partner see how the workflow pays for itself.
The fastest launch path is not a giant hospital sale. It is a visible Recovery Passport workflow that occupational rehab groups, PTs, training facilities, clinics, teams, schools, and athletes can understand in one meeting.
Movement Identity creates a value exchange for everyone around recovery.
Start premium with athletes. Scale through MSK recovery and return-to-work.
Do not compete with every existing platform. Own the record they do not own.
The stronger Canadian position is not another clinic app or another athlete-monitoring dashboard. It is the athlete-owned and person-owned Passport that lets existing systems become trusted sources while the individual controls access, expiration, revocation, and recovery memory.
The record usually stays with the provider. MI makes the recovery Passport portable and permissioned by the person.
They help access files. MI organizes recovery context, source labels, access rights, and handoffs around those files.
They are powerful for organizations. MI starts with the athlete-owned Movement ID that follows transfers, releases, school moves, and clinic changes.
MI connects the signal to surgery, rehab, PT notes, symptoms, confidence, review state, and scoped sharing.
MI turns training progress into a member-owned Passport that can support consults, recruitment, return-to-work, or performance reviews.
MI focuses on recovery memory: what happened, what changed, who reviewed it, and who was granted access.
Use the policy tailwind to get pilots, proof, and funding-ready evidence.
Pick the wedge
Lead with MSK recovery and return-to-work/activity coordination. Use the athlete Passport as proof, not the whole category.Land design partners
Training groups, PTs, occupational rehab clinics, sports medicine partners, teams, and a university validation path.Run a 90-day pilot
5-10 opt-in participants through intake, Recovery Passport reports, scoped Access Passes, and handoff feedback.Apply with evidence
Use letters of interest, pilot workflow data, safety review, and Canadian benefit metrics for grants and programs.Match each program to a specific Movement Identity workstream.
What has to be ready before IRAP, Mitacs, AI Missions, or adoption funding conversations.
Turn this from a page into a Canadian health-AI pilot conversation.
Show the sample recovery report, then ask partners for one practical design review: what data they would add, which role should see it, and what proof metric would make the Recovery Passport worth adopting.