The recovery credential network for the human body.
Movement Identity should not compete as another athlete passport. The bigger idea is episode-based recovery credentials: every injury, surgery, strain, training block, and return-to-work case becomes a source-labeled, person-owned evidence packet that authorized reviewers can inspect safely.
Existing tools track performance. MI should credential recovery.
The category is not a dashboard of more athlete data. It is a trusted recovery credential layer where the injury anchor, evidence requirements, review state, and access rights are attached to the person and the episode.
Every athlete or patient keeps the Recovery Passport across teams, clinics, schools, jobs, providers, and life stages.
PTs, trainers, teams, schools, clinics, and occupational rehab partners use scoped views because intake and handoffs get cleaner.
Every consented, de-identified episode can improve future benchmarks by tissue, procedure, week, source, and review outcome.
The product should feel like a vault, a timeline, and a network at once.
A Recovery Credential is not just a PDF report. It is a live, scoped record with an anchor, source evidence, reviewer status, access rights, and audit history. That is what makes it feel like infrastructure.
Start with four credentials people immediately understand.
These are narrow enough to pilot this year and broad enough to become infrastructure if they work.
Anchors the episode to imaging or clinical assessment, tissue location, grade, sprint exposure, eccentric strength, pain response, recurrence history, and review status.
Starts from the operative report, then tracks procedure-specific milestones, PT notes, gait trend, check-ins, testing, and clinician-reviewed flags.
Turns facility testing, strength, speed, mobility, readiness, and workload into a member-owned progress record that can be shared beyond the gym.
Packages approved functional context for worker, clinician, PT, employer-scoped reviewer, school, or case manager without exposing the whole record.
Every credential has the same skeleton.
This is what makes it repeatable: surgery, hamstring, quad, ankle, training progress, or return-to-work can all share the same trusted structure while using different evidence requirements.
A credential network creates value for everyone around recovery.
Carry recovery proof into teams, schools, trainers, doctors, agents, and second opinions.
Package measurable growth into a premium Passport that keeps members engaged.
Open a clean timeline before the session and send better handoffs after.
Inspect procedure- or tissue-specific evidence before follow-up without MI making a decision.
Start with permissioned history instead of rebuilding context from memory and screenshots.
Receive an approved, non-diagnostic handoff view instead of uncontrolled medical files.
How the credential becomes real.
Credibility comes from what MI refuses to do.
The next product move is not more pages. It is one working credential flow.
Choose one first credential: hamstring/quad strain, post-op recovery, training baseline, or return-to-work. Run 5-10 opt-in participants through the flow and measure whether the credential improves handoff clarity.