This timely evidence synthesis supports the need for an Academy of Plant-based Physical
Therapy. Given epidemiological and empirical evidence and the profession’s values and
practice scope, the time has come for a specialty of plant-based physical therapy based on
population health principles. This review connects these factors. Non-communicable
diseases (NCDs) are largely nutrition-related resulting from unnatural elements of our
diet (i.e., heart disease, several cancers, hypertension, stroke, diabetes, obesity,
gastrointestinal diseases, autoimmune diseases, renal disease, and Alzheimer’s disease).
Most adults, even children, have NCD risk factors or manifestations. Alternatively,
plant-based nutrition can prevent, manage, as well as potentially reverse these diseases,
as well as augment conventional physical therapy outcomes by reducing inflammation and
pain. Proposed competencies for plant-based physical therapists include high-level
competency in health and NCD risk assessments/evaluations, to establish population
health-informed nutrition needs for maximal health, healing and repair, in turn, function
and wellbeing; and assessment of patients’ nutrition-related knowledge, beliefs/attitudes,
self-efficacy, and readiness-to-change. Population-informed nutritional counseling is
initiated as indicated. An Academy of Plant-based Physical Therapy could advance the
profession globally at this point in history and also serve as a role model to other
health professions through practicing evidence-based, plant-based nutrition built upon
population health principles.