SCF

Swimming Injury Clinics in West Vancouver, British Columbia

Swimmer's shoulder is the most common sports injury in the pool.

6 clinics in West VancouverΒ·Swimming injury specialists

Swimmers perform thousands of shoulder rotations per training session β€” making shoulder impingement (swimmer's shoulder) the dominant injury in the sport. Breaststroke swimmers also develop medial knee pain (breaststroker's knee) from the whip kick. Lower back pain from butterfly and flip turns is also common. The best clinics for swimmers understand stroke mechanics and training volume, and can prescribe stroke-specific modifications during rehab. Browse 6 active sports and physiotherapy clinics in West Vancouver below.

6 clinics in West Vancouver

204-1455 Bellevue Ave, West Vancouver, BC V7T 1C3, Canada

West Vancouver, BC

+1 604-926-1331
Podiatry
View Clinic Profile β†’
Hollyburn Podiatry
●Open Now
5.0(8)

1455 Bellevue Ave #204, West Vancouver, BC V7T 1C3, Canada

West Vancouver, BC

+1 604-925-4246
MassageSports MedPodiatry
View Clinic Profile β†’
Kallman Tammy Dr
●Open Now
5.0(1)

1455 Bellevue Ave Unit 204, West Vancouver, BC V7T 1C3, Canada

West Vancouver, BC

+1 604-925-4246
MassageSports MedPodiatry
View Clinic Profile β†’

1884 Marine Dr, West Vancouver, BC V7V 1J6

West Vancouver, BC

604-926-2886
PhysioSports Med
View Clinic Profile β†’
4.7(373)

1873 Marine Dr, West Vancouver, BC V7V 1J7, Canada

West Vancouver, BC

+1 604-913-3668
Podiatry
View Clinic Profile β†’

575 16th St #210, West Vancouver, BC V7V 3R8, Canada

West Vancouver, BC

+1 604-926-2115
Physio
View Clinic Profile β†’

Common Swimming injuries treated in West Vancouver

Trusted by Canadian Physios

The tape your physio uses β€” now at home

Canadian sports clinics trust TapeGeeks for kinesiology tape, athletic tape, and taping supplies. The same professional quality is available for athletes and patients to use at home.

Other sports treated in West Vancouver

FAQs β€” Swimming Injuries in West Vancouver

What is swimmer's shoulder and how is it treated?

Swimmer's shoulder is subacromial impingement β€” pinching of the rotator cuff tendons under the acromion during the overhead pulling phase of freestyle, butterfly, and backstroke. It is treated with rotator cuff strengthening, scapular stabilization exercises, stroke modification, and sometimes corticosteroid injection for acute flare-ups. Most swimmers can continue training with modifications.

Can I keep swimming while seeing a physiotherapist?

Usually yes. A physio experienced with swimmers will prescribe specific stroke and volume modifications rather than complete rest. Common modifications include using a pull buoy to remove kicking stress, switching from butterfly to freestyle, or reducing total yardage while the injury heals.