Quick Movement Assessment
Cross-source consensus on Quick Movement Assessment from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- In one-on-one settings, the prioritized tests are breathing or forcing strategy, the Ober test, and toe-touch-to-squat. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments
- A small number of tests can provide enough information to make useful intervention decisions. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments
- The goal of the quick assessment battery is to choose tests that influence intervention decisions rather than collect every possible data point. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments
- In group settings, the assessment is reduced mainly to toe-touch-to-squat and a hip extension assessment. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments
- Quick assessments support rapid decision-making but do not replace a full evaluation when time and setting allow. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments
- A standing propulsion test is one preferred example of a group-friendly hip extension assessment. — IT Band Syndrome, Shoe Selection, and Quick Movement Assessments