Brandy Ramaj Jewett, DAT-MBA, LAT, ATC · Doctor of Athletic Training
There is a difference between a credentialed practitioner and a practitioner whose credentials built the program. Dr. Jewett is the latter. The research behind JSOH's law enforcement programs is her published work. The ergonomic assessments in the food service track are her documented assessments. The five-plus-year industrial track record is her operational record. The Jewett Standard is not a brand name. It is the actual standard.
Dr. Brandy Ramaj Jewett built JSOH on a specific premise: that the workers who power industrial operations, protect communities, and keep the food supply moving deserve the same caliber of clinical support that professional athletes have had for decades. And that the only way to deliver it is to be in the environment — on the floor, in the gear, in the conditions — not behind a desk.
Her doctoral training at the terminal clinical level in athletic training, combined with graduate-level business education, positions her to serve as both the practitioner on your floor and the clinical director who speaks fluently to your CFO. That combination does not exist in a staffing assignment.
Her published research on law enforcement biomechanics — duty belt load distribution and patrol vehicle ergonomics — is peer-reviewed work that now lives on every department assessment she conducts. Her food service ergonomic assessments have been documented on video in real production environments. Her industrial track record spans five-plus years at NASCO Industries in Indiana with zero musculoskeletal recordables during program tenure.
That is The Jewett Standard. Not a brand name — a documented track record with a named practitioner accountable for every outcome.
Every credential in this string has a direct application to the programs JSOH delivers. This is what it means for your operation.
The terminal clinical credential in athletic training — the doctoral level, not just a master's or bachelor's pathway. Combined with graduate-level business administration. What it means for you: The practitioner who walks your floor operates at the highest available clinical training level and speaks the financial and operational language your leadership team requires. One person. No translation needed.
The formal ergonomic credential that validates the assessment methodology used across all three JSOH program tracks. What it means for you: Every ergonomic evaluation — whether on a manufacturing floor, in a patrol vehicle, or on a food service cutting line — is conducted by someone whose qualification in that discipline has been independently verified. Not a generalist opinion. A certified ergonomic assessment.
State licensure in Indiana authorizing the hands-on clinical practice of athletic training. What it means for you: The hands-on care your workers receive — the assessment, the hands-on movement support, the discomfort resolution — is legally authorized care under state licensure. Not informal support. Not first aid. Licensed clinical practice at the point of work.
The national certification through the National Athletic Trainers' Association — the baseline credential requirement for practice as a certified athletic trainer anywhere in the United States. What it means for you: The practitioner on your floor meets the national standard, carries the national certification, and maintains the continuing education requirements that keep that certification active. The credential is current. The standard is maintained.
The Jewett Standard is the operating principle behind every JSOH program. It means doctorate-level clinical oversight on the floor. It means the practitioner whose name is on the door is the same person walking your facility. It means ergonomic assessments conducted by a certified industrial ergonomist who has documented real environments, not reviewed a textbook description of them.
Where a national staffing firm deploys an assignment, JSOH deploys an accountable clinical standard. The difference shows up in your recordable log, in your ER costs, in your workers' durability across a career.
It is not a brand name. It is a documented track record, a named practitioner, and a set of published clinical credentials that can be verified, audited, and held to account.
See What It Looks Like for Your Operation →Dr. Jewett's published work is not separate from her clinical practice — it is the foundation of it. The law enforcement programs JSOH delivers are built directly from peer-reviewed research she conducted.