Current Newsletter Articles :: June 2013

Earaches Resolved and Tubes Avoided - A Case Study
Documentation of the improvement of Otitis Media and the avoidance of recommended ear tubes for a baby boy appears in the May 28, 2013 issue of the scientific periodical, the Journal of Pediatric, Maternal & Family Health. Otitis Media is the scientific name for ear infections and according to medicinenet.com . . .
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Effectiveness of Back Surgery Questioned
The San Francisco Chronicle published a PRWeb story on May 29, 2013 with the headline of, "Recent Research Questions the Effectiveness of Back Surgery." The article cites two recent studies questioning the effectiveness of surgery for spinal problems. The article starts with the ominous fact . . .
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Is Sitting the New Smoking? Spinal Health Week
Above is a May 18, 2013 headline from the "International News Magazine" in Australia. The article and several others in additional publications, report on "Spinal Health Week" in Australia, and urge people to get moving. . . .
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Doctors Warn New Psychiatric Guide Could Drug People Who Don’t Need It
The above headline comes from an article on May 15, 2013 in the The Washington Times. The article, as well as scores of others, are all based on reviews of the new release of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, known as the DSM-5. This book, loosely referred to as the "psychiatric . . .
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Heart Rate Variability and Symptoms Improved with Chiropractic
In the Journal of Upper Cervical Chiropractic Research, a study was published on May 9, 2013, documenting a positive change in Heart Rate Variability (HRV) as well as a variety of other symptoms in a series of three different patients. HRV is used to measure the variation in beats of the heart. Since . . .
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Reduction of a Lumbar Scoliosis & Improved Cervical Curve
Published in the June 10, 2013, issue of the scientific journal, Annals of Vertebral Subluxation Research, is a documented case study of improvement in lumbar scoliosis, and cervical curve under chiropractic care. The authors note that between 2.5 and 15 percent of the adult population has scoliosis. . . .
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