Stress is a subjective wellness measure that helps professionals understand how mentally, physically or emotionally overloaded a client feels. A simple 0–10 stress score is not diagnostic, but it can be useful for monitoring readiness, recovery, behaviour change and response to interventions over time.
A client arrives for a session after a poor night’s sleep, a busy work week and increased muscle tension. Their performance is lower than usual, they feel more irritable, and they are finding it harder to concentrate. Before changing their exercise plan, it is useful to capture a simple stress score so the session can be interpreted in context.
Stress affects both the mind and body. A small amount of stress can support performance and motivation, but ongoing or high stress may contribute to physical symptoms, reduced concentration, irritability, sleep disruption and poorer recovery.
Test name: Stress
Also known as: Subjective stress score, perceived stress rating, wellness stress score
Purpose: To record how stressed a client feels at a specific point in time
What it assesses: Self-reported perceived stress
Equipment: Measurz, MAT or another recording system
Score: 0–10 scale
Best used with: Sleep, fatigue, mood, soreness, pain, training load and performance measures
Key limitation: It is subjective and not a diagnostic mental health assessment
Stress is the body’s physical or mental response to a demand, pressure or challenge. It may be short term, such as preparing for competition, or ongoing, such as work pressure, caregiving load, financial strain or persistent pain. The National Institute of Mental Health describes stress as a response to an external cause, while anxiety can continue even when the immediate stressor is not present.
In Measurz, the Stress wellness measure is usually recorded as a simple 0–10 self-report score. This provides a quick snapshot of how stressed the client feels today or over a selected period.
Stress scoring is used to add context to assessment and training data. A client with high stress may show reduced force output, slower reaction time, poorer balance, lower motivation, altered pain sensitivity or reduced tolerance to training. The score helps the professional avoid interpreting every poor result as a physical capacity issue.
It can be useful for monitoring recovery, identifying readiness trends, supporting load management, guiding conversations and tracking whether lifestyle, training or recovery strategies are helping.
The Stress score measures perceived stress. It reflects the client’s own rating of mental, emotional and physical pressure.
It does not measure cortisol, diagnose anxiety, diagnose depression, confirm burnout or identify the exact cause of stress. It should be interpreted alongside other information, including sleep, mood, fatigue, pain, workload, training load and client history.
This measure may be useful for athletes, active adults, rehabilitation clients, workplace health settings, students, shift workers and clients managing high training or life demands.
It is also useful when a professional wants a simple wellness trend rather than a formal questionnaire.
Measurz or MAT for recording
A consistent 0–10 stress scale
Optional notes field for context
Optional related measures such as sleep, mood, fatigue, soreness, pain score or training load
Ask the client to rate their current stress using this scale:
0 means no stress.
10 means the highest stress they can imagine or have experienced.
Use consistent wording each time. For example:
“On a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 is no stress and 10 is the highest stress you can imagine, how stressed do you feel today?”
Ask the client to consider their overall stress, including mental pressure, emotional load, physical tension, sleep disruption, irritability, difficulty relaxing or difficulty concentrating.
Record the score. Add notes only when relevant, such as “work deadline”, “poor sleep”, “family stress”, “competition week” or “high pain day”.
Repeat at regular intervals. Daily, weekly or pre-session recording can all be useful, but the same timing should be used where possible.
A 0–10 stress score is best interpreted as a trend.
A lower score usually suggests the client feels calm, settled or in control. A moderate score may suggest manageable pressure. A high score may suggest the client feels overloaded, under-recovered or less ready for high-demand tasks.
The score is more meaningful when compared with the client’s own baseline. For example, a stress score of 7 may be normal during competition week for one athlete but unusual for another client who typically scores 2–3.
A single high score does not prove a mental health condition. Repeated high scores, worsening stress, major behaviour changes, poor coping or safety concerns should prompt a supportive conversation and referral to an appropriate health professional where needed.
No high-quality universal normative value was found for a simple 0–10 Measurz-style stress rating across all populations.
For formal stress measurement, the Perceived Stress Scale is one of the most widely used validated self-report tools. It was developed to assess how unpredictable, uncontrollable and overloaded people perceive their lives to be.
For the Measurz 0–10 score, use individual baseline and trend-based interpretation rather than population norms.
The exact 0–10 single-item stress score is practical and quick, but it should be treated as a subjective wellness marker rather than a fully validated diagnostic scale.
The Perceived Stress Scale has substantial psychometric evidence and is widely used in research and practice, although stress measurement can vary by population, language, context and timing.
Common errors include changing the wording of the question, comparing one client’s score directly with another client’s score, treating a single score as a diagnosis, ignoring context, and recording the score inconsistently.
Stress ratings can be affected by personality, current mood, recent events, sleep, pain, caffeine, illness, training load and the client’s willingness to disclose how they feel.
Use Stress alongside other wellness and performance data. A high stress score before a maximal strength test, jump test or high-intensity session may help explain a lower result. A rising stress trend across a training block may suggest the need to review recovery, load, sleep, nutrition, scheduling or support.
Stress tracking can also improve communication. It gives clients a simple way to share readiness without needing a long conversation every session.
Record the Stress score from 0–10. Use the same timing where possible, such as pre-session or morning check-in.
Useful fields and notes include score, date, session context, sleep score, fatigue score, mood score, pain score, training load, competition timing, symptom notes and any relevant comments.
Track changes over time rather than overreacting to one score. Look for patterns such as rising stress with reduced sleep, increased pain, lower force output or reduced training tolerance.
Sleep
Mood
Fatigue
Pain score
Session RPE
Wellness monitoring
Training load
Readiness assessment
No. A 0–10 stress score is a subjective wellness measure. It can support monitoring and decision-making, but it does not diagnose anxiety, depression, burnout or any other condition.
There is no universal normal score for the Measurz 0–10 Stress measure. The most useful comparison is the client’s own baseline and trend over time.
It can be recorded daily, weekly or before sessions. The best frequency depends on the setting, but consistency is more important than frequency.
A high score should prompt a supportive check-in, review of load and recovery, and careful session planning. If the client reports ongoing distress, poor coping, safety concerns or significant impact on life, recommend support from an appropriate health professional.
Yes. Stress is more useful when interpreted with sleep, mood, fatigue, soreness, pain and training load.
Stress is a simple subjective wellness measure.
Use a consistent 0–10 scale and record it the same way each time.
Interpret stress as a trend, not a diagnosis.
High or rising stress can help explain changes in performance, recovery and readiness.
Use Measurz notes to capture context and compare stress with other assessment results.
Cohen, S., Kamarck, T., & Mermelstein, R. (1983). A global measure of perceived stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 24(4), 385–396.
Lee, E. H. (2012). Review of the psychometric evidence of the Perceived Stress Scale. Asian Nursing Research, 6(4), 121–127. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anr.2012.08.004
National Institute of Mental Health. (n.d.). I’m so stressed out! Fact sheet.
World Health Organization. (2026). Stress: Questions and answers.