Credential · Certification

CAPP-OB (Certificate of Advanced Practice in Physical Therapy in Obstetric Health)

PT10 citations · 3 lenses

The CAPP-OB (Certificate of Advanced Practice in Physical Therapy in Obstetric Health) is the APTA Academy of Pelvic Health Physical Therapy's advanced obstetric credential, requiring licensed PTs/PTAs to complete all levels of the Pregnancy & Postpartum track (restructured in 2025 into three webinars — Fundamental, Intrapartum, and Advanced topics, ~48 contact hours), pass each Post-Course Exam at 80% or higher with scenario testing, and submit a reviewed PT case reflection, all within a 5-year window.

It is a respected, focused academy certificate for obstetric/peripartum PT rather than an ABPTS board certification.

Score breakdown per lens
Cash-pay viability×25%
92/100

Postpartum and pregnancy PT is a premier cash-pay segment — patients commonly pay out of pocket for postpartum recovery and pelvic girdle pain, often at $150-$250+/session.

Pricing leverage×20%
88/100

Provider scarcity plus motivated, often-affluent peripartum patients supports premium pricing, package/program pricing, and concierge postpartum services.

Market differentiation×15%
80/100

APTA-academy obstetric credential is recognized by employers and patients seeking specialized pregnancy/postpartum care; differentiating in most markets though narrower than the full pelvic credential.

Owner leverage×15%
74/100

Supports building standardized prenatal/postpartum program offerings (classes, packages) that scale across credentialed clinicians.

Consumer demand×15%
90/100

Consumer demand for postpartum recovery and pregnancy-related pain care is strong and growing, amplified by social-media awareness of postpartum pelvic health.

Credential investment×10%
78/100

Modest application fee atop ~48 contact hours of webinar coursework; ROI is strong given premium cash-pay postpartum programming.

Evidence base · 10 sources
  1. 01
    Pelvic floor muscle training for preventing and treating urinary and faecal incontinence in antenatal and postnatal women
    Woodley SJ, Lawrenson P, Boyle R, Cody JD, Mørkved S, Kernohan A, Hay-Smith EJC · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2020
    Antenatal/postnatal PFMT prevents and treats urinary incontinence in pregnant and postpartum women.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD007471.pub4
  2. 02
    Pelvic floor muscle training during pregnancy to prevent urinary incontinence: a single-blind randomized controlled trial
    Mørkved S, Bø K, Schei B, Salvesen KÅ · Obstetrics & Gynecology2003
    Intensive antenatal PFMT significantly reduced urinary incontinence in late pregnancy and postpartum.
    RCTdoi:10.1016/s0029-7844(02)02711-4
  3. 03
    Interventions for preventing and treating low-back and pelvic pain during pregnancy
    Liddle SD, Pennick V · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2015
    Exercise and tailored interventions reduce pregnancy-related low-back and pelvic girdle pain.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD001139.pub4
  4. 04
    What is the evidence for abdominal and pelvic floor muscle training to treat diastasis recti abdominis postpartum? A systematic review with meta-analysis
    Gluppe S, Engh ME, Bø K · Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy2021
    Abdominal/PFM training can reduce inter-recti distance in postpartum diastasis recti, but RCT findings are mixed and high-quality evidence is limited.
    Meta-analysisdoi:10.1016/j.bjpt.2021.06.006
  5. 05
    Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women
    Dumoulin C, Cacciari LP, Hay-Smith EJC · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2018
    PFMT is effective first-line treatment for urinary incontinence in women, relevant to postpartum incontinence management.
    Meta-analysisdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD005654.pub4
  6. 06
    Does regular exercise including pelvic floor muscle training prevent urinary and anal incontinence during pregnancy? A randomised controlled trial
    Stafne SN, Salvesen KÅ, Romundstad PR, Torjusen IH, Mørkved S · BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology2012
    A pregnancy exercise program including PFMT reduced urinary incontinence in late pregnancy.
    RCTdoi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.2012.03426.x
  7. 07
    Conservative prevention and management of pelvic organ prolapse in women
    Hagen S, Stark D · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2011
    PFMT reduces prolapse symptoms, relevant to peripartum pelvic floor changes.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD003882.pub4
  8. 08
    Biofeedback and/or sphincter exercises for the treatment of faecal incontinence in adults
    Norton C, Cody JD · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2012
    Biofeedback and pelvic floor exercises may improve fecal incontinence, including postpartum anal incontinence.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD002111.pub3
  9. 09
    Does it work in the long term? A systematic review on pelvic floor muscle training for female stress urinary incontinence
    Bø K, Hilde G · Neurourology and Urodynamics2013
    Supports long-term efficacy of PFMT for female stress urinary incontinence with adherence.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/nau.22292
  10. 10
    Multimodal physical therapy versus topical lidocaine for provoked vestibulodynia: a multicenter, randomized trial
    Morin M, Dumoulin C, Bergeron S, Mayrand MH, Khalifé S, Waddell G, Dubois MF · American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology2021
    Multimodal pelvic floor PT outperformed lidocaine for vestibulodynia/dyspareunia, relevant to postpartum sexual pain.
    RCTdoi:10.1016/j.ajog.2020.08.038
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