Roseville Chiropractor - Baby Adjustment KCRA

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Uploaded by on May 23, 2008

Dr. Ross is shown performing a CSi: Cranial Spinal Integration on his grand-daughter. Roseville Chiropractic office: www.Wellness22.com

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Uploader Comments (southpaw1022)

  • Quack! Quack! Quack!

  • @TheDuck663 - I could easily delete your comments, but I would rather leave it up for the rest of the world to see how intelligent you are. The medical profession kills the equivalent to two full airplanes every few days, the United States is ranked 37th in the world in healthcare and we are the quacks. Thanks for taking the time to visit my videos.

  • likely a combination of politically skewed statisitic, lack of anything like a "national" healthcare system (poor access) and a diet that puts far to much emphasis on portion size (obesity)... that having been said, one could just a easily link that ranking to chiropractic if they wanted as the profession is much more prominent in this country than in any of the more highly ranked industrialized nations.

  • Not really looking to get in a pissing war -- The biggest culprits are too much food and too many drugs. I train docs around the country, DCs,MDs, DOM - so I have a great respect for all doctors that strive to improve the health of their patients. This whole conversation started because some yahoos thinks it is unethical and wrong for me to work on my own granddaughter. Soon I will be doing research in conjunction with a highly trained (Yale,Harvard) MD that has seen the results of my work.

  • @southpaw1022 no pissing match intended... though whoever the yahoo is, he or she kind of has a point... I mean, there is a long standing prohibition against treating one own family given the inevitable loss of objectivity that comes with such practices.

    Ill grant you the "too much food", but you just cant make the case for "too many drug"... statins/beta blocker, ect. have proven time and again to significnatly decrease mortality in any number of circumstances... ask your Yale/harvard MD pals.

  • If I was a brain surgeon I would have someone else do brain surgery on my family. My family trusts me and I respect that trust. Funny thing you should bring up statins -- my MD friend's specialty is cardiology (MD PhD from Yale, intenship/residency at Harvard) -- he believes that statins ARE over prescribed and putting many patients at risk for further complications (he took his own mother off them). Just spoke with a psychiatrist Monday that felt there is a problem with over-prescribing.

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  • Seriously, how many MDs have lost their licenses due to treating family? Shoot, in California they have to kill or maim 17 people before they are even questioned (I know that's a stretch), but give me a break - there is sooo much leeway in discipline in the medical arena, the only profession that has less control of there minions is lawyers. If chiropracotrs killed as many people in 100 years as aspirin and motrin does in one year we would have been long gone years ago.

  • Hi,

    I am Dr. Ross' daughter and mother of Jordyn (I also just recieved my adjustment a few minutes ago). There is no one that I would rather treat my daughter than her grandfather. We know that it is not just the adjustments that keep Jordyn as healthy as she is, but it sure helps. I have seen many ill people come into see my father when all other medical approaches failed and have seen miracles occur. H1N1 doesn't scare me -- if your nervous system is strong your immune system will be stronger

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  • @drsoandso I would hope that MDs have many more clinical hours in their specialties as the skills necessary for surgery and and the knowledge base necessary to prescribe drugs and other courses of care should take longer. I do have a simple question for you as an MD defending your profession -- Why is our country rank almost at the bottom in healthcare of civilized nations?

  • @drsoandso -- I didn't completely dodge the fact that MDs get much more clinical time than we do -- that wasn't the point I was addressing. I was addressing your assumption that our Differential Diagnosis classes were all about subluxation. There are many post-graduate programs in chiropractic if someone is to choose AND

  • @southpaw1022 Interesting that you completely dodge the fact that chiropractic college is primarily classroom (where you primarily get your didactic differential diagnosis education I guess), while medical education is split between classroom (where we apparently get nearly as many hours as DC's) and 22 months of clinical rotations where our training is truely hands on.

    As for postgraduate training, to say that we more requirements is an understatement given that DC's essentially have none...

  • @drsoandso AND YOU KNOW WHAT IS TAUGHT IN CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE HOW? I can guarantee that subluxation is never discussed in 99% of the Differential Diagnosis classes throughout the world. Although it is an important part of chiropractic, you are way off base. As far as the post-graduate studies, yes you do have more requirements -- never said you don't. Here is a basic curriculum from a chiropractic college

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