Name Changes and Revised Scope of Practice

PAA Name Change and New Member Badges

We have had a lot going on of late. We are well on our way to updating the myriad places that our name appears, changing it to Pilates Association Australia as agreed at our AGM in August. And we have been progressing through all the places that our new logo needs to be updated.

As part of the rebranding, we also looked at the naming of our member levels. There were some issues raised about “Professional Pilates Instructor”.  Should we be called instructor or teacher? What are the implications of calling this level professional and not others? We decided to resolve this issue by changing the member level to “Pilates Practitioner”. The timing for this made sense as we have been working on our different membership category badges.

We wanted to keep them simple as we would like you to include your badge on your marketing material and it needs to be legible when it is small.

These are the links to the branding material:

We will be changing the membership level name from Professional Instructor to Pilates Practitioner on our website and in our systems wherever we are able. There may be some places that you see the previous name as it is expensive and redundant to change in our current membership management system as we plan to migrate to our new system in March 2024.

Your membership certificate will be updated at your next renewal. Please email info@pilates.org.au if you need your certificate reissued before renewal.

For registered studios, this will be your badge:

There is more information here on how to become a registered studio.

Scope of Practice, Standards of Practice

And we are excited to finally release our revised Scope of Practice and our new Standards of Practice for our members who fall in the Pilates Practitioner, Studio Instructor and Group Instructor categories.

History

This work kicked off as a joint APMA/ PAA project pre-Covid with Susie Bond, Wendy Larsen, Penny Latey, Chris Lavelle, Melanie Trapman and Sharan Simmons.

The starting point for developing our documents were:

  • ESSA (Exercise & Sports Science Australia) for Scope of Practice
  • American Physical Therapist Association for Scope of Practice
  • Australian Physiotherapy Association (APA) for Scope and Standards of Practice

An issue that we discovered was that in many of the documents, Scope of Practice was never really defined. Statements like “operate within your scope of practice” within the Scope of Practice felt unhelpful. When we queried regulators on the vagueness of the explanation of scope, we were told that AHPRA registered professionals ticked a box each year saying they were competent in the areas they were practicing. Calls to be explicit about the requirements by the regulator or the relevant associations for scope or qualifications were dismissed as unnecessary.

We decided that we wanted to be much clearer as to what is expected of our members and to hopefully set a new standard in this important area of compliance, which is designed to protect the general public, ensuring safe practice.

Development

Pilates can cover such a wide spectrum of needs and we did not feel like this had been clearly articulated in the past. This table was developed to spell out the range of benefits of Pilates for the targeted populations.

Clearly, clients may not fall solely into one category, but this provided more clarity as to the expectations regarding education levels and group size.

It was felt that this was too much information for our scope document and so it was reduced to two columns.

Client ProfileLower Risk IndividualsHigher Risk Individuals
Intention
  • Improved fitness, physical well-being and mental health

  • Performance enhancement

  • Prevention and correction

  • Supervised guidance

  • Improve functional activities of daily life


  • Rehabilitation & ongoing management of more complex treatable conditions

  • Management of systemic health conditions

Targeted population

  • Healthy & low risk individuals

  • Professional and amateur athletes, movement specialists and performers

  • Low risk prenatal and postnatal individuals

  • Individuals at risk of musculoskeletal injury due to occupation, repetitive activity and/or general deconditioning

  • Individuals with well-managed neuro- and degenerative conditions

  • Individuals with muscular or structural conditions or disorders

  • Aging population

  • Low risk pre- and post-surgery individuals

  • Individuals with a range of conditions including fibromyalgia, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s, arthritis

  • Special populations eg children

  • Individuals with complex muscular or structural conditions/disorders

Focus

  • Improve suboptimal postural patterns and movement strategies by addressing range of movement, strength and flexibility, breathing and stabilisation strategies

  • Improve performance in professional, amateur and everyday activities and reduce injury risk, including adverse effects of repetitive movements/postures

  • Address balance, gait and falls risk

  • Prepare and assist with physical impacts of low-risk pregnancy and childbirth and post-natal recovery

  • Prepare for surgery and assist with recovery

  • Postural awareness and improvement strategies for hyperlordosis, hyperkyphosis, scoliosis, low back pain and other musculoskeletal conditions

  • Address specific impacts of client condition

  • Address range of movement, strength and flexibility especially to assist with activities of daily living

  • Improve mental health

  • Mitigate pain

  • Modify according to progression of disorder or improvement in condition

Education level of instructorPAA approved DiplomaDiploma plus:
  • additional condition-specific training,

  • Advanced Diploma or

  • Allied Health Bachelor degree

Group size (recommended)Same apparatus: No more than 8 participants to one instructor. (This may be varied dependent on team size if teaching athletes.)
Mat: No more than 12 participants to one instructor
Mixed studio equipment: No more than 4 participants to one instructor
No more than 3 participants to one instructor

The revised Scope of Practice and Standards of Practice page includes:

  • Scope of Practice
  • How the PAA sets professional standards
  • Requirements for membership – education qualifications, ongoing professional development, etc
  • Generic service provisions
  • Additional service provisions for therapeutic purposes
  • PAA Code of Conduct

 

What does this mean for you?

When you renew your PAA membership, you will be asked to acknowledge acceptance of the PAA Scope of Practice, Standards of Practice and Code of Conduct.

Read the revised documents and if you have any questions or concerns, please contact us at info@pilates.org.au

 

Templates and Resources

A number of useful templates have also been updated in the member’s area (log in then select Resources/Document Library):

  • PAA Physical Readiness Activity Questionnaire (PARQ)
  • Guidelines for Static Postural Assessment
  • Static Postural Assessment
  • Dynamic Postural Assessment
  • Pregnancy Screening
  • Post Natal Screening
  • Clinical Note Taking for Pilates
  • Case Notes Template

 

Robyn Rix

President

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