The Foundation of Every Profession
Every legitimate profession—medicine, physical therapy, nursing, chiropractic—defines what its practitioners can and cannot do. That boundary is called the scope of practice.
For the Medical Exercise Professional (MedExPRO), understanding and respecting scope of practice isn’t just a legal safeguard—it’s the foundation of your credibility, professional relationships, and client safety.
What Scope of Practice Means for MedExPROs
Your scope of practice defines the specific actions you are qualified and authorized to perform based on your training, certification, and professional guidelines.
For MedExPROs, the scope is clear:
You design and implement safe, effective exercise programs for clients with medical conditions who have been discharged or cleared from medical care.
That means:
The focus of a MedExPRO is function, safety, and progression — not therapy, treatment, or medicine.
Why Scope Protects You
β οΈ If you ever have to ask yourself, “Is this something I should be doing?”—don’t do it until you’ve consulted the referring provider.
Why Scope Protects Your Clients
The Most Common “Scope Slips” to Avoid
Even experienced MedExPROs sometimes blur the line. Here are a few examples to recognize and prevent:
π« Diagnosing pain or injury:
You can describe what you observe—not what you think caused it.
β
“I notice limited hip flexion when you squat.”
β “You may have a labral tear.”
π« Changing or suggesting medications:
Refer the client back to their physician for any medication-related questions.
π« Treating acute symptoms:
If pain, swelling, or instability returns, stop and refer. You’re not re-treating; you’re retraining.
π« Using therapy terminology:
Avoid words like rehabilitation, therapy, treatment. Use medical exercise, functional training, post-rehab management instead.
How to Operate Professionally Within Scope
As outlined in the AMES Manual, this framework keeps every client process compliant and consistent:
The MedExPRO Referral Ignition Kit includes physician letters, assessment summaries, and communication templates—everything you need to maintain a clear, documented professional boundary.
Inform every healthcare provider you work with about your process. Transparency builds trust and protects both you and your client.
The more you understand anatomy, pathology, and exercise physiology, the more confidently you’ll know your limits—and when to refer.
Key Takeaways
β
Scope defines your role and builds your credibility.
β
It protects both you and your client.
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It earns the trust of medical professionals.
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It ensures long-term safety, integrity, and success.
Next Steps
“Scope of practice isn’t a limitation—it’s a shield that protects your professionalism, your clients, and the integrity of the entire Medical Exercise profession.”
— Dr. Mike Jones, PhD, PT
Build your practice with tips learned over 28+ years teaching MedXPROs around the world!!
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