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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.