A Biopsychosocial Approach to Endometriosis Care with Jill Mueller
A Biopsychosocial Approach to Endometriosis Care with Jill Mueller
2 hours
The instructors
Overview
Jill has a lived experience of endometriosis. Jill also has a very strong, biopsychosocial approach to pain care. Combine that with powerful somatic training under the tutelage of Dr. Peter Levine and a close working relationship with Dr. Mathew Leonardi, and Jill provides a truly comprehensive, biopsychosocial look at endometriosis care.
Presenter: Jill Mueller
Details
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A PDF of the slides will be available for download on this webinar page, along with any resources and recommended readings referenced during the session.
- The slides, resources, and recommended readings will also be available in the on-demand course along with the session recordings.
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The session will be recorded and added to the Year of Mentorship course, which you can access at any time. The course also includes a discussion forum and a space to submit your homework for each session.
Part of a Year-Long Program
This session is part of Carolyn Vandyken’s Year of Mentorship program.
- Learn from Carolyn Vandyken and an esteemed international group of 12 clinical and academic leaders in pelvic health!
- 2 hours every other Thursday from January 08 - December 17, 2026 (excluding July and August)
- Throughout the year-long mentorship, you will be paired with a lab partner and will present case studies to each other.
- Bring your own partner (a colleague or friend) to each receive 25% off the program cost
Registration is available for the full program only; individual sessions cannot be purchased separately. Visit the bundle page to learn more and register.
The instructors
BKin, BHScPT (Pelvic Health)
Jill has been a physiotherapist for 20 years, focusing on pelvic health, orthopaedics, and visceral therapy. She has been assisting courses for the past 5 years and is ready to share her knowledge by teaching her own course on Endometriosis. She has a keen interest in using a patient-centered approach, integrating an evidence-based, biopsychosocial model into her practice.
Jill has explored using these approaches, having endometriosis herself, and is now able to manage symptoms and live a more productive life. She feels that physiotherapists can play a vital role in helping these clients regain a better quality of life, and hopes to show others how they can help their clients suffering with similar symptoms.