Neurocentric Training - A Brain-First Approach to Rehab
549,00 €
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- Language: English
- 2-day practical course focused on nervous system driven rehab
- Directly applicable tools for movement, pain, and performance
- Accreditation with Kwaliteitshuis and PQK pending
- Includes lunch, snacks, and on-site parking
Instruktori
Jannik Schuster
Opis
Neurocentric Training – A Brain-First Approach to Rehab
Pain, movement restrictions, and reduced performance are not just musculoskeletal problems. They are often driven by how the nervous system processes information.
In this 2-day practical course, you will learn how to apply neurocentric training principles in physiotherapy and rehabilitation. The course places the nervous system at the center of assessment and treatment, with a strong focus on how the brain uses sensory input to control movement, pain, and stability.
You will gain a clear understanding of how the visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive systems influence movement quality and symptom presentation. Through hands-on testing and training methods, you will learn how to identify relevant deficits and provide targeted input that increases safety for the nervous system. This often leads to immediate changes in pain, range of motion, and movement control.
The course combines essential neurophysiological background with a strong emphasis on practical application. Everything is taught with direct transfer to daily clinical practice, using case examples from physiotherapy, rehabilitation, and sports settings.
After these two days, you will be able to integrate neurocentric training into your current treatment approach, without replacing what already works, but by adding a powerful layer of clinical reasoning and intervention.
Study Goals
After completing this 2-day course, participants will be able to:
- Explain the role of the nervous system in movement control, pain, and performance
- Understand how visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive systems influence movement quality and symptom presentation
- Assess movement and pain from a neurocentric perspective
- Identify relevant deficits in sensory input systems
- Apply practical testing and training strategies targeting the nervous system
- Integrate neurocentric training principles into existing rehabilitation and therapy programs
- Use neurocentric interventions with patients suffering from acute and chronic pain
- Apply the concepts in both rehabilitation and performance based settings