CONTACT: 650-218-5512
THIRTY FIVE YEARS OF DISCOVERY AND APPLICATION
PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF THERAPY AND REHABILITATION
PATIENT VIDEOS
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Neuromyofascial Release Therapy
Neuromyofascial Release Therapy or NMR-T is the name I have given this Diagnostic and Treatment Protocol that describes, detects, and resolves the dysfunctional nexus between codependent functional elements that accrue and degrade, over time, optimal performance and quality of life. I know that's a mouthful, (continue reading)
The Journey of Discovery
After completing my undergraduate requirements at UC Davis, I matriculated at the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic and subsequently graduated summa cum laude in the spring of 1981. Since 1983 I have treated animal patients in over 50 Veterinary Clinics and Hospitals around the San Francisco Bay Area and in Southern California.
Over the years I have treated everything from Horses, Llamas, Dogs, Cats, to Rabbits, Chinchillas and even Guinea Pigs. Pet owners seeking my help with their companions invariably get around to asking if I attended some specialized training to explain the results I achieve (see before & after Videos). The simple answer is, (continue reading)
Working With Veterinarians
As a Chiropractor, why you should
§ 2038. Musculoskeletal Manipulation 16 CA ADC § 2038. For Chiropractors in California, (continue reading)
Before considering Laser Treatments for your Dog
New technology vastly superior to Cold Lasers
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Why I started making Videos
Some time back as I finished up with a difficult case, involving a pup with a painful and incapacitating neck injury, the client thanked me profusely for helping his companion. I told him that he was very welcome as I looked into the lobby for my next client. As he turned to go, he stopped short, turned around and exclaiming that others need to see what I had done for his dog. I gave him my usual response saying… “ tell your friends.” That didn’t seem to satisfy him and by the look on his face it was obvious that he wasn’t finished. He went on to say that I should capture my treatment results on video and start a youtube channel and a website as well. My question to him in response was, well….why? I've never advertised, I don’t have a website, and I’m extremely busy by word of mouth and people can hear about my results on Yelp. He then explained something that caused me a shift in my thinking. He continued, “its not for you it’s for others like me.” I looked at him, I suppose, like your dog looks at you when they don’t understand what you just told them. He went on to explain that had a neighbor not given him a referral, he probably would have had to endure the heartbreak of having to put his companion down to relieve his suffering. Nothing else was working and that for every one you help, Kelly, there are probably untold thousands who are put to sleep for want of what you have the ability to do for them. Trying to end the conversation and move on to my next client, I responded that I understood what he was saying but really what could I realistically do to help those thousands. He concluded by saying that they are being put down for lack of knowledge, not knowing that a workable technology exists, because people like you don’t make it known and that knowing this would empower people to search for and demand similar help in whatever area area or region they reside.
That is what prompted me to start taking before and after videos on my iphone, start a website and a youtube channel. I’m no videographer but I think the message gets across. I just have to remember to pull out my iPhone on the first visit with each new case. Just showing the after video doesn’t really show how bad they were when I started the case and saying, “I swear you should have seen how bad they were in the beginning just doesn’t cut it!” Also there a lot of cases I see where someone's companion is having pain such that they cry out periodically or they are not able to jump up on the couch or into the car any longer. I’m certainly not going to ask the pet owners to make there companion cry out or demonstrate their companions inability to jump up so I can catch it on video. Consequently you will only see videos that show obvious effects of an animals malady. Below will start my many videos of animals with severe maladies that I have helped.
This idiom expresses the concept of a lot of small bad things happening, none of which is fatal, but which add over time to a slow and painful demise. My 35 years of observations as a Chiropractor who treats animals can be summed up this way: It is the un-addressed, untreated, and unresolved cumulative effects of repeated macro and micro trauma to your pet's spine, extremities, and soft tissue that silently and for the most part painlessly leads to the eventual unhappy and painful conclusion that I so commonly witness. Suddenly they're coming up lame,