• EP 87 OTs Don’t Cut: We Get Curious and Ask Questions
    Jun 1 2026

    In this episode I share a real‑life phone call from a very young potential client who reached out about a tongue‑tie release and frenectomy, expecting a quick surgical solution. Instead of rushing to agree or disagree, I slowed things down, asked targeted questions, and uncovered signs of temporomandibular disorder (TMD) that had never been considered in the process of her search for help. In this episode, I walk you through how I used education to shift her understanding of her symptoms, and why clarifying goals and history matters just as much as any hands‑on technique. You’ll also hear how these kinds of conversations can build relationships with physicians and other providers—not by “selling” OT, but by helping clients land in the right place, with the right services, at the right time through the process of education.

    Thanks for listening! - Amy

    Check out our two free resources at: Fascia-Informed CE Home

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    21 mins
  • EP 86 The Future of Fascia: A Scoping Review Yields Research Directions
    May 18 2026

    In this episode of The Fascia Informed Therapist, we unpack a recent scoping review on the future of fascia research and translate its findings into practical clinical direction for occupational therapists and rehab professionals. We explore how upcoming studies are likely shifting toward fascia’s role in movement organization, chronic pain in older adults, and integrated approaches that blend manual therapy, movement‑based interventions, and neurophysiologic methods. You’ll hear what the author recommends about effect sizes and sample sizes in the simplest possible language—and, more importantly, how those choices shape the kind of evidence you’ll be seeing in the coming years. By the end, you’ll have a clearer picture of where fascia research is headed and how to use this emerging evidence to support fascia‑informed reasoning in everyday practice.

    Please share the podcast with anyone who may be interested (or you think they should be).

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    Resources:

    Trewartha, D., & Wheeler, A. (Eds.). (2020). Scars, adhesions and the biotensegral body: Science, assessment and treatment. Handspring Publishing.

    Zieliński, G. (2025). The future of fascia: A scoping review on emerging research. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 26(18), 8871. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26188871

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    22 mins
  • EP 85 Lessons from a New Client: We see the body differently.
    May 4 2026

    In this episode I review the case of a new client who really made it hit home how we, as fascia-informed practitioners see the body differently. We engage with our clients differently and it gives them hope.

    When something as simple as a knee replacement (it is really NEVER simple) causes long-term discomfort, our clients benefit from a new perspective. After countless doctors, surgeons and therapists, this client found hope.

    Join the community! I have a new website and new platform. I hope you'll take a look!

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    27 mins
  • EP 84 Different Approaches, One Client: Handling Clinical Contradictions
    Apr 6 2026

    What do you do when a client comes to you following advice that doesn’t align with your approach? In this episode, we explore how to navigate those moments with professionalism and clarity. Learn how to explain your clinical reasoning, educate in a way clients can understand, and empower them to make their own informed decisions without dismissing or undermining another practitioner. Through a fascia-informed lens, we focus on communication that builds trust, supports autonomy, and transforms care.

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    27 mins
  • EP 83 A New Lens: The Why Behind the Fascia-Informed Practice Book
    Mar 23 2026

    In this episode of The Fascia-Informed Therapist Podcast, I introduce my recently published book, The Occupational Therapy Practitioner’s Guide to Fascia-Informed Practice, and read the preface to provide context for its development.

    The Occupational Therapy Practitioner’s Guide to Fascia-Informed Practice

    This episode outlines the clinical and conceptual motivations behind the text, including the need for a more integrative framework that bridges emerging fascia research with occupational therapy practice. It reflects on gaps in traditional models of care and the growing interest among practitioners in approaches that support more comprehensive assessment, clinical reasoning, and intervention planning.

    The book was written to offer a structured, evidence-informed perspective on fascia as a clinically relevant system, while remaining accessible and applicable to everyday practice. It is intended for occupational therapy practitioners seeking to expand their theoretical foundation and consider new dimensions of patient care.

    Listeners will gain insight into the purpose, scope, and intended application of the book, and may find it particularly relevant if they are interested in advancing their clinical reasoning or integrating fascia-informed concepts into their work.

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    19 mins
  • EP 82 Understanding Trauma in Our Clients: Research, Brain Science, and Practical Care
    Mar 9 2026

    In this episode, I sit down with Madeline Seide, OTD, OTR/L, RYT, LSVT-BIG, to explore how trauma shows up across the clients we work with every day. We discuss what current research is revealing about trauma’s impact on the brain, why understanding trauma matters for all healthcare professionals, and how it can influence behavior and engagement in therapy. Madeline and I also share practical ways we apply trauma-informed principles in our daily practice to create safer, more effective therapeutic environments.

    Join our community to stay updated on all we have to offer health and wellness providers on fascia-informed care: Fascia Informed Subscriber

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    1 hr and 26 mins
  • EP 81 Matching, Pacing, Leading: The First Intervention in Fascia‑Informed Care
    Feb 23 2026

    In this episode, I’m sharing one of the most foundational parts of my fascia‑informed approach: the progression of matching, pacing, and leading. Before I introduce any hands‑on work, movement exploration, or self‑treatment strategies, I focus on helping the client’s nervous system settle enough to participate.

    I talk about how I attune to a client’s initial tempo, tone, and level of activation, and how that simple act of matching creates the safety their fascia and nervous system need. From there, I share how I gradually shift the rhythm of the session—using posture, breath, cadence, and presence—to support regulation without forcing change.

    You’ll hear how I use these relational cues as the first intervention in fascia‑informed care, and why this sequence makes such a difference in interoception, tissue responsiveness, and therapeutic outcomes. If you’re looking for practical, immediately usable ways to help clients arrive more fully in their bodies, this episode will give you a clear, grounded framework you can bring straight into your next session.

    Join our community: Fascia Informed CE Subscriber

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    14 mins
  • EP 80 Pain, Protection, and the Adult Body: What Fascia-Informed Therapists Need to Know About Childhood Sexual Abuse
    Feb 9 2026

    Recent headlines have once again brought childhood sexual abuse into public view, often in ways that expose survivors while protecting systems of power. In this episode, we shift the focus away from spectacle and back to care.

    Using evidence from two large systematic reviews, we explore how childhood sexual abuse, often occurring alongside other adverse childhood experiences, shapes nervous system development and increases the risk of chronic pain and pain-related disability in adulthood. We discuss how long-standing threat responses can amplify pain even decades later.

    For fascia-informed therapists, this episode offers a clear rationale for trauma-informed evaluation, education, and referral which are grounded in science, not assumption. Pain, in this context, is not a failure of tissue, but a signal from a system that learned to survive.

    Join us: Fascia Informed CE Subscriber

    References from the podcast:

    • Bussières, A., Hancock, M. J., Elklit, A., Ferreira, M. L., Ferreira, P. H., Stone, L. S., Wideman, T. H., Boruff, J. T., Al Zoubi, F., Chaudhry, F., Tolentino, R., & Hartvigsen, J. (2023). Adverse childhood experience is associated with an increased risk of reporting chronic pain in adulthood: a stystematic review and meta-analysis. European journal of psychotraumatology, 14(2), 2284025. https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2023.2284025
    • Karimov-Zwienenberg, M., Symphor, W., Peraud, W., & Décamps, G. (2024). Childhood trauma, PTSD/CPTSD and chronic pain: A systematic review. PloS one, 19(8), e0309332. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0309332
    • See the alarming extent of NIH and NSF funding cuts in 2025

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    41 mins