Dr. Douglas Hoogendyk specializes in biomechanical assessment and movement science as it relates to joint function and athletic performance. Since starting his clinical practice in 2003,
Dr. Hoogendyk has worked with the most renowned orthopedic and sports medicine organizations in the United States, including the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) in New York City and Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation in West Orange New Jersey, consistently ranked the top orthopedic sports medicine and neurologic rehabilitation hospitals in the United States.
Dr. Hoogendyk has served athletes and teams from all arenas nationally and internationally, including athletes from USA Track and Field, US Women's National Soccer Team, MLS, NBA, MLB, NFL, NHL, as well as tactical and special operations professionals. He was also a member of the Sports Medicine staff for the AVP Professional Beach Volleyball Tour from 2004-2010.
As a Board-Certified Specialist in Orthopedics' (OCS), Evaluation & Treatment of the Spine (Cert. MDT), and Strength & Conditioning Science (CSCS) and Sports Science (CPSS), Dr. Hoogendyk has also earned his Orthopedic Residency and Fellowship in Biomechanics and Movement Science with the University of Southern California, Movement Performance Institute and Department of Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy. He has served as an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Southern California in the Department of Biokinesiology and
Physical Therapy (Orthopedic Clinical Assessment, Clinical Imaging and Radiology). He was recruited to design and teach the Clinical Imaging and Radiology curriculum for the Doctor of Physical Therapy program at Loma Linda University. Dr. Hoogendyk is an invited speaker and keynote presenter both nationally (NATA, APTA, MLS) and internationally (Isokinetic FIFA Conference, NSW Institute of Sport, Australia) on topics ranging from: running performance and injury, sports performance and technology, injury reduction strategies in the developing adolescent athlete and establishing qualitative and quantitative variables for return to sport readiness.