Key Takeaways
Neurofit Advisor Spotlight: Bryan Kang, OTR/L, Product Leader
At Neurofit, we’re guided by experts who understand both sides of the healthcare equation: those who deliver care and those who build tools to scale it. One of those experts is Bryan Kang.
Bryan is a licensed Doctor of Occupational therapy with deep experience in product strategy, currently serving as a product manager at OpenLoop Health. At Neurofit, he acts as a Strategic Advisor, helping us shape our roadmap through a dual lens: clinical utility and scalable design. In this spotlight, we explore Bryan’s philosophy on occupational therapy, digital health, and why these tools matter more than ever.
Clinician First, Always
Bryan brings a grounded, clinician-first perspective to everything he does. "There’s a big need in occupational therapy for tools that reflect what patients actually need—and what clinicians actually have the time and budget to use," he explained. Whether that’s a pegboard or a digital dashboard, the tools should be driven by real clinical moments, not tech for tech’s sake.
As he sees it, Neurofit fits this mold. It gives occupational therapists an option to extend care, offer structure between sessions, and adapt to diverse client needs. "It resonates with where we’re going as a profession, evolving to use whatever resources help us serve people better."
Why Adoption Takes Time (and Trust)
Despite the promise of digital tools, Bryan is candid about the realities of clinical adoption. “Occupational therapy is slower to adopt tech—not because we don’t want to innovate, but because the system doesn’t always make it easy,” he notes. Budget constraints, inconsistent reimbursement, and workflow misalignment often stand in the way.
For clinics to embrace platforms like Neurofit, the value must be clear—both in terms of patient outcomes and operational sustainability. As Bryan explains, “The data has to not only allude to the patient’s improvement, but also support the outcomes that matter for clinic operations and reimbursement.”
Ultimately, adoption requires striking a balance between clinical benefit and economic viability. Building trust takes more than a promising product; it requires evidence, transparency, and alignment between product teams and providers.
Seeing the Bigger Picture
Bryan’s role at Neurofit isn’t just advisory, it’s integrative. He helps the team think through how product features support recovery, reduce administrative friction, and fit within exisitng care models.
He’s particularly excited about how platforms like Neurofit create continuity between clinic and home. “Some individuals might prefer tactile, analog approaches, but others benefit from the flexibility of digital. It really depends on the season of their rehabilitation”. He notes that recovery doesn’t just happen in clinic; it happens at home, on non-work days, in small moments. Digital platforms can fill those gaps.
Looking Ahead
When asked about what comes next, Bryan highlights three priorities:
But more than any feature, Bryan is focused on one principle: meeting people where they are.
"Whether it’s a tactile tool or an AI-powered app, our job is to support function, engagement, and confidence. That’s how we help people get back to life."
Having Bryan Kang as an advisor ensures that we remain clinician-centered and impact-driven. His insight helps Neurofit stay grounded in the realities of practice, while pushing the boundaries of what digital rehab can offer. If you're an OT, clinic owner, or health system leader looking to bring cognitive recovery into focus, we’d love to show you what we’re building
Learn how Neurofit supports modern, functional rehabilitation.