Pain Science Explained for Coaches, Trainers and Therapists

Last updated on March 19, 2026 10:47 am
Category:

Description

Pain is one of the most common reasons people seek help from clinicians, therapists, coaches and rehabilitation professionals. Yet despite how common it is, pain is often misunderstood.Many people are taught a simple model where pain equals tissue damage. In practice, things are rarely that straightforward. Athletes sometimes experience severe pain with very little structural injury, while others function well despite significant changes on imaging. Pain can persist after tissues have healed, fluctuate without obvious cause, and strongly influence movement behaviour.This course explains why that happens.In this course you will learn the core concepts of modern pain science in a clear and practical way. We explore the difference between nociception and pain, how the nervous system detects potential threat, and how signals are processed in the spinal cord and brain. You will also learn about central sensitisation, neuroplasticity, fear avoidance, catastrophising, expectations and movement behaviour.Importantly, this course focuses not just on theory but on how these concepts apply in real rehabilitation and coaching environments.You will learn:Why pain does not always reflect tissue damageHow nociceptors detect potential threat in the bodyHow the spinal cord and brain process nociceptive signalsWhy pain can persist after tissues have healedHow psychological and behavioural factors influence recoveryWhy people begin to avoid movement after injuryHow understanding pain can improve communication with clients and patientsThe goal of this course is to make pain science clear, practical and clinically useful.Rather than presenting overly complex neuroscience, the lectures break down key concepts step by step so they can be applied directly to rehabilitation, coaching and movement-based practice.This course is designed for:Physiotherapy studentsSports therapy studentsPersonal trainersStrength and conditioning coachesMassage therapistsRehabilitation professionalsAnyone interested in understanding how pain works in the bodyBy the end of the course, you will have a much clearer understanding of how pain is produced, why it sometimes behaves unpredictably, and how this knowledge can help you support people returning to movement and activity.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Pain Science Explained for Coaches, Trainers and Therapists”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *