Hypermobility Care in Performing Arts

Webinar 1:

March 10, 2025

5pm PT; 8pm ET; midnight UK (March 11); 11am Sydney (March 11)

Early Detection in Dance Medicine: Integrating Contemporary Screening Tools and Lived Experience in Hypermobility Management

Webinar 2:

April 14, 2025

5pm PT; 8pm ET; 1am UK (April 15); 10am Sydney (April 15)

Supporting the Musical Performer: Integrating Hypermobility Knowledge and Neurodivergent Understanding in Performance Care

Register
Register

About this Series

Hypermobility Care in Performing Arts

Join us for a special Two-Part Webinar Series designed for healthcare professionals, educators, and performing arts specialists. Review tools, evidence-based strategies, and explore case-based discussions to transform how you support hypermobile performers.

 

March 10, 2025

5pm PT; 8pm ET; midnight UK (March 11); 11am Sydney (March 11) – 90 minutes

In Webinar 1: Early Detection in Dance Medicine: Integrating Contemporary Screening Tools and Lived Experience in Hypermobility Management we will dive into tools used for holistic assessment, and through case-based learning we will explore the importance of early detection in hypermobile dancers. We will review comprehensive screening approaches that combine traditional methods with contemporary tools and reflect on the relationship between hypermobility and associated conditions. Our expert speakers— Dr. Tina Wang, Dr. Cliffton Chan and Bonnie Southgate—will share clinical pearls, practical management approaches, and insights on how to support dancers from injury recovery to professional performance.

 

April 14, 2025

5pm PT; 8pm ET; 1am UK (April 15); 10am Sydney (April 15) – 90 minutes

In Webinar 2: Supporting the Musical Performer: Integrating Hypermobility Knowledge and Neurodivergent Understanding in Performance Care we will examine the intersection of hypermobility and neurodivergence in performing artists, highlighting specific considerations for this population. Through a case presentation of a musician, we will discuss how to adapt traditional screening methods, modify management approaches, and create supportive performance environments. Our speakers will also discuss the importance of language and diagnostic criteria.

Panelists: Dr Tina Wang, Dr Cliffton Chan, Bonnie Southgate

Both webinars feature interactive panel presentations and discussions where you will gain practical strategies and clinical pearls from our experts.

Panel Bios
Dr. Tina J Wang is board certified Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation medical doctor and is an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Loma Linda School of Medicine, University of California Riverside, and the Southern California University of Health Sciences. She is core faculty for the musculoskeletal curriculum including the use of ultrasound based diagnosis and interventions. Her published research focuses on ultrasound characteristics of fascial dysfunction to improve clinical understanding, diagnostics, and treatments of myofascial pain syndromes, Ehlers Danlos Syndromes and Hypermobility Spectrum Disorders. Her research on fascial dysfunction has awarded her full membership with Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Honor Society. Dr. Wang serves on the board of the Fascia Research Society and co-chairs the Scientific Programming Committee and a member of the Commission on Standards for Fascia-Oriented Sonographic, Indentometric, and Palpatory Assessments. Dr. Wang is also active with the Performing Arts Medicine Association and is a member of the research committee. Dr. Wang is a yoga practitioner and continues her studies under the lineage of T Krishnamacharya and TKV Desikacha and studies Ayurveda with Dr. Anupama Kizhakkeveett at the Southern California University of Health Sciences
Associate Professor Cliffton Chan, PhD, BPhysio (HonsI), GDMusic, GCEduStd (High Ed), DipSportsNutri, is a hypermobility and performing arts physiotherapist. He is one of the highest ranked physiotherapist researchers in Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome in Australia (ExpertScape). Authoring over 35 peer-reviewed publications, his recent research focuses on the validation of clinically-relevant hypermobility assessment tools in the periphery and the spine, and interventional studies to optimise functional performance and reduce injury in various occupational cohorts including musicians or dancers. Cliffton is the primary physiotherapist consultant for the Australian National Academy of Music, internationally renowned as the only purely performance classical music training academy in Australia. In his academic position at Macquarie University, he teaches across the 3-year Doctor of Physiotherapy program and anatomy units as the inaugural Head of Anatomy Education. Outside this, he continues to provide practical skill education through post-graduate workshops and seminars, and is an active member of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome International Consortium (Allied Health Working Group), International Association for Dance Medicine & Science, Performing Arts Medicine Association, and Australian Society of Performing Arts Healthcare.
Bonnie Southgate‘s career spans professional dance and healthcare, beginning as a first soloist with elite ballet companies in the United States and the United Kingdom (1980–1993). Her transition into movement education and rehabilitation commenced with comprehensive Pilates teacher training through the Pilates Foundation (2000), followed by qualifications in Sports Therapy and Corrective Exercise Specialisation from Movement Therapy Education (2013).
A diagnosis of hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome in 2018 provided Southgate with a distinctive lens through which she approaches both clinical practice and research. Her background in professional dance, along with her lived experience, provides unique insights into the complexities of managing hypermobility in performing artists.
In 2016, she established Movement Anatomy Essentials in Dorset, specialising in assessing and managing hypermobile populations and performing artists. Her expertise has been instrumental in her role as MSK adviser for SEDS Connective, a neurodivergent and hypermobility charity, and in her previous work leading support groups for EDS UK.
Southgate recently completed her MSc in Dance Science at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance (2024), focusing on evidence-based approaches to dancer health and screening. The intersection informs her research and clinical practice of her professional dance career, clinical expertise, and personal experience with hypermobility spectrum conditions.

Click here to Register for FREE Today!