About this episode
In this solo, unscripted episode of Health Coach Radio, Erin Power dives into a deceptively simple — yet incredibly powerful — concept for health coaches: symptomatology. While the word itself may sound clinical or dry, Erin reframes symptomatology as a practical, ethical, and client-centered tool that fits squarely within a health coach's scope of practice. This episode explores how health coaches can work skillfully with client-reported symptoms without diagnosing, treating, or crossing professional boundaries. Erin explains how symptom self-assessments can support awareness, pattern recognition, behavior change, and more productive conversations between coaches and clients. If you've ever felt unsure about how to discuss symptoms without "playing doctor," or you want a clearer, more confident way to guide clients using the information they already bring to the table — this episode will give you clarity, confidence, and practical direction. Episode Overview 0:00 – Welcome Back to Health Coach Radio 0:40 – Why This Episode Is an Unscripted Riff 1:15 – What Symptomatology Actually Means 2:20 – Why Symptomatology Sounds Boring (But Isn't) 3:05 – Scope of Practice: What Health Coaches Can and Cannot Do 4:10 – Using Symptom Self-Assessments Ethically 5:30 – Symptoms as Client-Reported Data, Not Diagnoses 7:05 – Pattern Recognition and Behavior Change 9:10 – Helping Clients Build Awareness Without Labels 11:05 – Empowering Clients Through Language and Observation 13:20 – Common Mistakes Coaches Make When Discussing Symptoms 15:10 – How Symptomatology Builds Trust and Buy-In 17:05 – Final Thoughts and Practical Takeaways for Coaches 19:10 – Episode Wrap-Up Key Concepts in This Episode What Symptomatology Is (and Is Not) Symptomatology refers to the collection and observation of symptoms as reported by the client — without interpretation, diagnosis, or medical judgment. It allows coaches to stay firmly within scope while still working meaningfully with real client experiences. Staying Within Scope of Practice Health coaches are not diagnosticians. Erin explains how symptom tracking and self-assessment tools help coaches guide reflection and lifestyle change without making medical claims or recommendations. Symptoms as Feedback, Not Problems to Fix Rather than treating symptoms as enemies to eliminate, this episode reframes them as useful signals that can inform behavior, habits, and self-awareness. Client Language Matters Using the client's own words — instead of clinical labels — strengthens trust, clarit