A grounded project that adds a different angle without repeating the others.
The existing support dashboard for a sports medicine clinic displayed patient intake metrics and appointment logs, but lacked a dedicated view for tracking soft tissue recovery trends. The kinesiology team needed a way to monitor elasticity scores and collagen response data from runners undergoing rehabilitation after high-intensity training cycles.
We designed a separate panel that pulls data from the clinic’s biomechanical assessment records. Instead of a generic activity feed, the panel shows vector force graphs from treadmill tests and passive stretch measurements taken during weekly check-ins. The layout prioritizes the comparison of pre- and post-session values for each patient.
The refresh uses the same backend as the main appointment system but introduces a filtered view. Each patient card includes a small timeline of their cartilage tension readings and a note on the type of running surface used during tests. The interface avoids clutter by hiding historical data behind a simple toggle.
The support team now uses this panel during weekly case reviews. The separate angle—tracking tissue response rather than just appointments—gives the dashboard a clear purpose without duplicating the existing workflow. The page adds a separate point of view, so the series feels planned rather than duplicated.
A focused project built around practical decisions and constraints.
The focus is practical and concrete, with enough detail to avoid a generic teaser. This item focuses on practical use, tradeoffs, and decisions that a reader may recognize. It avoids broad promotional claims and keeps the topic tied to a clear situation.
El flujo de reservas estacionales se diseñó para un centro de entrenamiento que gestiona picos de demanda en periodos de pretemporada y competición. La solución debía ajustarse a restricciones reales: capacidad limitada de pistas, horarios variables según la fase de entrenamiento y necesidad de priorizar atletas según su plan de carga semanal.
Se trabajó con datos de ocupación de los últimos dos ciclos para modelar la asignación de turnos. El resultado fue un sistema que equilibra la demanda sin sobrescribir las sesiones de recuperación programadas.
Durante la pretemporada, el flujo redujo un 30 % las colisiones de horario entre sesiones de alta intensidad y trabajo de recuperación. Los preparadores reportaron menos ajustes de última hora y los atletas pudieron seguir su plan de cargas sin interrupciones. El sistema sigue activo con ajustes menores cada ciclo.