The Wall Street Times

International Fibromyalgia Coaching Institute Partners with The Social Good Experiment

International Fibromyalgia Coaching Institute Partners with The Social Good Experiment
Photo Courtesy: Tami Stackelhouse / Kristen Thomasino

In a significant step toward expanding global support for people living with fibromyalgia, the International Fibromyalgia Coaching Institute (IFCI) has announced a new collaboration with The Social Good Experiment by Buddytown, a platform powered by behavioral tracking, AI insights, and community engagement. 

The partnership merges IFCI’s science-backed coaching model with Buddytown’s technology-driven social-good ecosystem, creating a new blueprint for empowering people with chronic illness.

As the world’s only coaching institute dedicated exclusively to fibromyalgia, IFCI provides the specialized guidance rarely found in traditional medical settings. Through its Certified Fibromyalgia Coach® and Certified Fibromyalgia Advisor® programs, IFCI offers evidence-based tools that help patients manage symptoms, regulate the nervous system, navigate flares, and rebuild daily function.

Tami Stackelhouse, founder of IFCI and a leading advocate in fibromyalgia care, says,  “Fibromyalgia affects millions worldwide, yet reliable education and support remain scarce. By partnering with The Social Good Experiment, we’re merging empathy, coaching, and technology to expand what’s possible for the communities we serve.”

Why This Partnership Matters Now

Fibromyalgia remains widely misunderstood, despite affecting 6.4% of the global population. Patients commonly experience delayed diagnosis, lack of treatment guidance, and medical systems unprepared to address chronic pain and neurological dysregulation.

Buddytown’s Social Good Experiment offers a powerful complement to IFCI’s work. The platform uses AI-driven behavioral insights, gamification, and positive habit tracking to encourage small steps toward better health and well-being. Users engage in wellness challenges, monitor progress, and participate in community movements that reinforce sustainable behavior change.

By integrating IFCI’s fibro-specific coaching with Buddytown’s technology, the partnership establishes a unified path for meaningful, data-informed progress.

A Shared Vision: Action, Accountability, and Community

The collaboration centers on one belief: healing requires more than information. It requires action, accountability, and a supportive environment.

The Social Good Experiment brings together:

  • Action: Small, doable steps toward better wellness
  • Data: AI insights that uncover helpful behavior patterns 
  • Community: Engagement with a positive, uplifting network
  • Personalization: User dashboards that track growth over time

These elements mirror IFCI’s foundational approach—pacing, nervous system regulation, boundary-setting, and mindset shifts—giving patients a structured, real-time roadmap for sustainable improvement.

Stackelhouse shares, “When people feel supported and when their actions are seen and celebrated, everything changes. That is how real transformation happens.”

Expanding Global Awareness Through Data-Backed Storytelling

Early in the partnership, IFCI and Buddytown will highlight the lived experiences of people with fibromyalgia. Buddytown’s platform captures small daily wins, behavior patterns, and moments of progress that are often overlooked.

This enables data-guided storytelling. Patients can track improvements in pacing, sleep, stress management, and flare recovery, while IFCI-trained coaches interpret the trends and explain the science behind them. Together, they create a fuller picture of fibromyalgia. One built from lived experience, measurable steps forward, and shared understanding.

Data-Backed Outcomes That Reinforce the Mission

The outcomes are significant. Graduates of the Certified Fibromyalgia Advisor® program typically experience noticeable improvements in their symptoms within a few months. Those completing the Certified Fibromyalgia Coach® program often see substantial progress, with many approaching a much better quality of life by the time they graduate.

Pairing these outcomes with Buddytown’s AI-supported tracking opens the door to new insights on behavior, symptom patterns, engagement, and long-term wellness strategies. It also strengthens research, advocacy efforts, and global visibility for chronic pain communities.

Launching a Movement, Not Just a Partnership

The collaboration launches with several initiatives designed to engage, educate, and empower:

  • Expert-led webinars featuring IFCI and Buddytown leaders
  • Digital wellness challenges using gamified habit-building
  • Collaborative social media campaigns amplifying real patient voices
  • Global awareness events focused on fibromyalgia and chronic pain
  • Calls to action inviting people worldwide to join the Social Good Movement

This marks the beginning of a larger effort to support chronic illness through technology, behavioral science, and community-driven change.

Stackelhouse explains, “This partnership helps us build a world where healing is collaborative, compassionate, and accessible.”

A Turning Point for Fibromyalgia Advocacy

By uniting IFCI’s fibro-specific expertise with The Social Good Experiment’s AI and behavioral technology, the partnership introduces a bold new model for supporting invisible illnesses. It brings together data, human storytelling, technology, and meaningful connection—four elements that rarely exist together in chronic pain advocacy.

With this collaboration, IFCI strengthens its role as a global leader, driving systemic change in fibromyalgia care and shaping the future of chronic illness support.

To learn more about IFCI, visit FibromyalgiaCoachingInstitute.com. To participate in The Social Good Experiment, visit SocialGoodExperiment.com/fibrocoach or join the Social Good Movement at SocialGoodMagazine.com.

This article features branded content from a third party. Opinions in this article do not reflect the opinions and beliefs of The Wall Street Times.

More from The Wall Street Times