Objective functional capacity testing: standardised measurement and insurer-ready reporting

Clinicians need to measure and document functional capacity objectively — with standardised tests, normative benchmarks, and reports that stand up to scrutiny. PRAXIS provides all three, with automated scoring, provenance labelling, and cryptographic report sealing.

PRAXIS for clinicians: Standardised test battery across five domains. Automated normative benchmarking. Sealed clinical reports with SHA-256 integrity, provenance labelling (Gold/Silver/Bronze), and attributed audit trails. Consistent across practitioners. Audit-ready.

Measure and document functional capacity objectively

PRAXIS measures five domains — Strength, Endurance, Power, Mobility, Balance — using a standardised test battery with published normative data. Every result is scored automatically against age- and sex-matched population benchmarks. No manual lookups, no subjective scoring, no variation between practitioners.

Insurer-ready reports that are defensible and consistent

PRAXIS generates sealed clinical reports with cryptographic integrity (SHA-256), provenance labelling, and attributed audit trails. Reports are immutable once finalised, with versioned amendments that preserve the original. This format is designed for insurer, medico-legal, and WorkCover contexts — defensible, consistent, and transparent.

Important: PRAXIS is not an NDIS report-writing tool. It does not generate NDIS-compliant reports or map to NDIA section numbers. Its standardised documentation can serve as supporting evidence in broader reporting contexts, but PRAXIS does not replace scheme-specific frameworks.

Automate scoring and reporting from physical tests

PRAXIS automates the entire pipeline: test → score → benchmark → report. Results are benchmarked against published normative data, provenance-labelled, and compiled into sealed reports. No manual score lookups, no ad-hoc report writing, no inconsistency between practitioners.

Are wearable metrics accurate enough for health decisions?

PRAXIS addresses this directly through its provenance system. Wearable data (Strava, Garmin) is labelled Silver tier — device-derived, not clinician-measured. Clinical test results are labelled Gold. Self-reported data is Bronze. Practitioners and patients can see exactly how each data point was collected and make informed decisions about its weight.

Track progress after injury or surgery — objectively

PRAXIS supports baseline → intervention → reassessment workflows with sealed reports and version history. Sealed reports with normative benchmarks let practitioners and patients compare functional capacity over time objectively — tracking genuine recovery, not subjective impressions.

Patient-owned data access and consent

PRAXIS is patient-controlled: individuals own their data and grant/revoke practitioner access through tiered consent (basic, My Health Record, research). All consent changes are recorded in attributed audit trails. Patients can share their Fitness-for-Age Profile with GPs, specialists, or other practitioners directly.

PRAXIS is not: an EMR, a diagnostic tool, a consumer fitness app, or an NDIS report-writing tool. It is functional capacity measurement and reporting software for Australian health and exercise professionals. Full canonical reference →