Cameron Hunt
- Functional movement assessment targeting posture and positioning.
- Exercise prescription progressing to real-world functional movements.
- Active rehabilitation for injury management and pain resolution.
- Biomechanical analysis to break fitness plateaus and improve performance.
- Return-to-activity planning for outdoor adventure and sport participation.
This summary is for informational purposes only and may not be accurate.
Elios Health
4132 Main Street, Vancouver, BC, V5V 3P7
Cameron loves being a kinesiologist, and has been a practicing member of the British Columbian Association of Kinesiologist’s since 2007. What makes Cameron unique is his ability to offer a multimodal approach to physical activity. He combines his expertise as a strength training coach, with his experience as a myofascial bodywork specialist using A.R.T. (Active Release Therapy). His training style focuses on posture and body positioning progressing to functional movements that translate to performance in real world activity. He uses his skills to support people in injury management, pain resolution, and dispersing nagging physical ailments through to breaking fitness plateaus for those wanting get next level performance. He enjoys creating strategies that are engaging and clear in a way that his clients can connect with. Overall, Cameron seeks to help people’s fitness, happiness and self-confidence, through creating approaches that are fun and sustainable. Cameron was awarded best personal trainer in Squamish for 3 consecutive years but moved back to Vancouver to support his daughters’ education. He’s very grateful to have found the Elios Health family to share the same passion for the outdoors and wellness. As an avid rock climber Cameron favorite achievements have been to climb Sir Donald and NE buttress of Slesse. Cameron also loves route development and along side Aaron Kristianson developed the Spirit of Squamish, The Parking lot Wall, and St.Bernard climbing routes and was awarded the coveted Golden Scrub Brush award in 2024. He also is a keen skier and mountain biker and understands the importance and challenges of being fit in outdoor adventure pursuits.
Kinesiology is the study of human movement—the intersection of anatomy, physics, and performance. For climbers, it’s a map to efficiency, injury prevention, and strength that serves the send. It deciphers how bodies adapt to stress, how movement becomes mastery, and how small tweaks unlock impossible lines. It’s not just science—it’s movement, understood.