Membership

Everything I've built.
One subscription.

Clinical protocols, lab guides, patient education resources, case studies, and new content every month — built specifically for physical therapists who want to go deeper.

Monthly
$5 /month
Billed monthly. Cancel anytime.
Start Monthly

Everything included

Full article libraryAll current and future articles across all 6 pillars
Clinical protocolsFunctional movement assessment frameworks and treatment overlays
Patient education handoutsDownloadable resources you can use directly in clinic
Lab interpretation guidesApoB, hs-CRP, fasting insulin, vitamin D, and more
Case studiesDe-identified clinical cases with functional medicine overlay
New content monthlyLibrary grows continuously — your access grows with it

No contracts. Cancel anytime. Both plans include identical access — the only difference is billing period.

Six pillars. One framework.

Every piece of content is organized around the systems that determine whether your patients actually heal.

01
Clinical Protocols

Functional movement assessments, inflammation protocols, and return-to-sport frameworks with a functional medicine overlay — built for PT practice.

02
Patient Education Resources

Downloadable handouts on gut health, sleep, inflammation, and blood sugar. Patient-facing language. Ready to use in clinic on Monday morning.

03
Nutrition & Lifestyle

Anti-inflammatory nutrition, blood glucose optimization, supplement frameworks with evidence tiers, and gut health essentials for clinicians.

04
Lab Interpretation

Key labs to understand, functional vs. standard reference ranges, and how to have informed conversations with patients about their results.

05
Performance & Longevity

Zone 2, VO₂ max, HRV, NAD+, peptides, and wearables — the clinical movement perspective that Attia, Huberman, and Greenfield can't provide.

06
Case Studies

De-identified clinical cases blending PT and functional medicine — showing how the framework applies to real presentations in the outpatient clinic.

Common questions

Who is this for?

Physical therapists, PTAs, and movement-based clinicians who want to integrate functional medicine thinking into their practice. Some content — particularly the Performance & Longevity pillar — is also relevant for health-forward patients and consumers who want a clinician's perspective on optimization and longevity science.

What's the difference between monthly and annual?

Access is identical. The only difference is billing period. Annual works out to $4.17/month — effectively two months free compared to paying monthly. If you're not sure yet, monthly is a fine place to start.

How much content is in the library right now?

The library is actively being built. New content is added monthly across all six pillars. Members get access to everything as it's published — the subscription price reflects early access. It will not stay at this price as the library grows.

Can I cancel anytime?

Yes. No contracts, no cancellation fees. Monthly subscribers can cancel before their next billing date. Annual subscribers retain access through the end of their paid year.

Is this approved for CE credit?

Not currently. The content is educational and clinically grounded but is not currently submitted for formal CEU approval. That may change as the library grows.

Is there a free option?

Yes — the homepage, about page, methodology page, and one or two free articles are always available without a subscription. You can also read a free article before deciding. The full library, protocols, downloads, and case studies are member-only.

Who writes the content?

Everything is written by Jesse Krempasky, PT, DPT — a 20-year outpatient physical therapist based in Scranton, PA. No ghostwriters, no AI-generated content, no outsourced articles. If it's in the library, it came from clinical practice. Read more about Jesse →

JK

Built by a clinician, for clinicians.

Jesse Krempasky, PT, DPT — 20 years in outpatient practice, self-directed functional medicine education, active Hyrox competitor. Everything in this library comes from clinical practice, not a seminar binder.