Credential · Certification

EIM Pelvic Health Specialist Certification

PT11 citations · 3 lenses

Evidence In Motion's Pelvic Health Specialist Certification is a hybrid (online didactic plus in-person/virtual lab) post-professional program of roughly 7-9 months, comprising 7 required courses plus 2 electives, including in-depth internal (intravaginal/intrarectal) and external evaluation and treatment, therapeutic neuroscience education, and capstone examinations.

Base tuition is approximately $4,950 (with an optional post-professional DPT add-on of ~$6,300), and it is open to PT, PTA, OT, and OTA.

It is a rigorous certificate of competency rather than an ABPTRFE-accredited fellowship or ABPTS board certification; the strongest accredited pathways remain ABPTRFE pelvic/women's-health residencies and the ABPTS Women's Health (WCS) board certification.

Score breakdown per lens
Cash-pay viability×25%
95/100

Pelvic health is arguably the strongest cash-pay niche in PT — patients routinely pay $150-$250+/session out of pocket, and private-pay pelvic practices are proliferating in urban and affluent markets.

Pricing leverage×20%
92/100

A documented shortage of trained pelvic clinicians plus high patient motivation supports premium and concierge pricing; the EIM credential's depth (internal techniques, capstone exams) reinforces a premium positioning.

Market differentiation×15%
80/100

EIM is a well-known post-professional brand and the certificate is differentiating in most markets, though it is less of a household credential among patients than Herman & Wallace's series or the WCS board cert.

Owner leverage×15%
78/100

Pelvic-focused clinics scale by training and hiring additional certified clinicians with consistent internal/external protocols; the structured EIM curriculum aids standardization across hires.

Consumer demand×15%
92/100

Consumer demand is strong and growing, driven by postpartum recovery, menopause, perimenopause, and increasing men's pelvic-health awareness.

Credential investment×10%
72/100

Tuition (~$4,950) is meaningful and the program spans 7-9 months, but ROI per training dollar is exceptional given premium cash-pay rates and scarcity of providers.

Evidence base · 11 sources
  1. 01
    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
    31 trials (1817 women); PFMT cures or improves urinary incontinence and supports PFMT as first-line treatment for women.
    Meta-analysisdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD005654.pub4
  2. 02
    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
    Reviews long-term effectiveness of PFMT for female stress urinary incontinence, supporting durable benefit when training is adhered to.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/nau.22292
  3. 03
    Conservative prevention and management of pelvic organ prolapse in women
    Hagen S, Stark D · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2011
    PFMT reduces prolapse symptoms and severity versus control in women with pelvic organ prolapse.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD003882.pub4
  4. 04
    Individualised pelvic floor muscle training in women with pelvic organ prolapse (POPPY): a multicentre randomised controlled trial
    Hagen S, Stark D, Glazener C, Dickson S, Barry S, Elders A, et al. · The Lancet2014
    One-to-one PFMT produced significantly greater reduction in prolapse symptom score at 12 months than lifestyle-advice control.
    RCTdoi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61977-7
  5. 05
    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
  6. 06
    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
  7. 07
    Biofeedback and/or sphincter exercises for the treatment of faecal incontinence in adults
    Norton C, Cody JD · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews2012
    Biofeedback and sphincter/pelvic floor exercises may improve outcomes in adults with fecal incontinence.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1002/14651858.CD002111.pub3
  8. 08
    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 physical therapy produced greater reductions in pain and dyspareunia than topical lidocaine, sustained at 6 months.
    RCTdoi:10.1016/j.ajog.2020.08.038
  9. 09
    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
  10. 10
    Pelvic floor muscle training is effective in treatment of female stress urinary incontinence, but how does it work?
    Bø K · International Urogynecology Journal and Pelvic Floor Dysfunction2004
    Reviews mechanisms by which PFMT improves stress urinary incontinence, underpinning the physiological rationale taught in pelvic-health curricula.
    Narrative reviewdoi:10.1007/s00192-004-1125-0
  11. 11
    Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women: a Cochrane systematic review abridged republication
    Dumoulin C, Cacciari LP, Hay-Smith EJC · Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy2019
    Republished Cochrane evidence reaffirming PFMT as effective first-line treatment for female urinary incontinence.
    Systematic reviewdoi:10.1016/j.bjpt.2019.02.012
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