Kelcie works with patients whose bodies do not follow predictable patterns—where joint instability, autonomic variability, sensory processing differences, pain and fatigue converge to create complex, multi-system symptoms.
Her practice focuses on restoring safe, sustainable movement using strategies tailored to connective tissue variation, orthostatic intolerance (like POTS), pain sensitisation, and neurodivergent nervous systems. She brings a calm, structured, and practical approach to presentations that have often been dismissed, misunderstood, or unsuccessfully treated with conventional physiotherapy.
Kelcie provides physiotherapy tailored to the unique movement patterns seen in hypermobility spectrum disorders and EDS. Her approach builds stability from the ground up, focusing on low-threat movement patterns, restoring proprioception, and joint protection strategies.
She understands how joint laxity affects the entire system—energy expenditure, muscle recruitment, pain sensitivity, autonomic load, and breathing mechanics. Her programs emphasise stability, efficient movement, and functional confidence rather than high-intensity strengthening that can exacerbate symptoms.
Working within Biio’s dysautonomia pathway, Kelcie assesses how autonomic changes influence movement, posture, and functional capacity. She evaluates patterns such as orthostatic tachycardia and blood pooling responses, breath pattern shifts under load, temperature regulation changes and positional triggers for fatigue, dizziness, and cognitive symptoms.
Treatment focuses on widening upright tolerance gradually and safely through horizontal-to-vertical exercise progression, pacing and threshold-based training and personalised self-management strategies.
Many patients Kelcie supports have chronic pain shaped by central sensitisation, joint instability, sensory overload and executive dysfunction that makes pacing difficult.
Her sessions incorporate sensory-aware cueing and environment adjustments, careful movement selection that respects pain thresholds and nervous-system–safe progressions.
As part of Biio’s Complex Care team, Kelcie also conducts biio.intake assessments—Biio’s comprehensive clinical intake used for patients with multi-pathway, unexplained, or long-standing symptoms.
Kelcie’s assessments translates complex clinical histories into a clear, structured picture that guides treatment planning and care team formation.
Her assessment work helps the team determine what is driving symptoms, what matters most now, and which interventions will be safe, realistic, and effective, allowing patients to feel understood from the very first step.