Max Your Results with Multi-Modality Treatments
by Cameron Bishop
This class contains great clinical nuggets and pearls that will increase your patient retention, clinical results and communication skills. It will open new doors to great additions to your clinic.
Max Your Results with Multi-Modality Treatments
Course Overview
This class will give you an extra edge in obtaining maximum results, and mastering your treatment strategy. It will cover how to utilize postural therapies, environmental tips, mind sciences, feedback and evaluation systems, patient compliance pointers, and a special section on how to deal with patient plateaus.This course provides many insightful methods you can teach your patients to enhance and maintain their clinical results.
Promo Video
Course Objectives
- Learn how various modalities can enhance your acupuncture results.
- Be able to implement in practical ways non- TCM treatments within your acupuncture practice.
- Understand pain management measurements and protocals.
Course Outline
0 hrs - 1 hrsModalities that blend with acupuncture are introduced. Knowledge in postural, physical and mind sciences are explored.
1 hrs - 2 hrsEnviromental related therapies, such as, music and sound therapy, grounding, earthing, food therapy, sunshine, light therapy, forest medicine, mud therapy, gathering Ling, and the use of cold and heat.
2 hrs - 2.5 hrsCommunication research to increase patient compliance, understanding and retention are explored. Including the research, assessment and measurement.
2.5 hrs - 3.5 hrsThe current research for food, habits, smoking and alcohol and patient results. How this is combined with successful patient outcomes.
3.5 hrs - 4.5 hrsTips for when patients progress is impeded, stalled or stopped. How to manage patient outcomes and expectations.
Teacher
More...
This course is a good overview of several factors involved in client retention, client progress plateaus, and ways to work together with other modalities and give your clients more ways to help themselves. Cameron does a good job of relating things back to Chinese and Japanese medicine, and really hones in on clinical applications and on the literature. Grace G.United States of America
Max Your Results with Multi-Modality Treatments
Advance your results with clinical pearls from real clinical practice.
by Cameron BishopMax Your Results with Multi-Modality Treatments
Course Overview
This class will give you an extra edge in obtaining maximum results, and mastering your treatment strategy. It will cover how to utilize postural therapies, environmental tips, mind sciences, feedback and evaluation systems, patient compliance pointers, and a special section on how to deal with patient plateaus.This course provides many insightful methods you can teach your patients to enhance and maintain their clinical results.
Course Objectives
- Learn how various modalities can enhance your acupuncture results.
- Be able to implement in practical ways non- TCM treatments within your acupuncture practice.
- Understand pain management measurements and protocals.
Course Outline
0 hrs - 1 hrsModalities that blend with acupuncture are introduced. Knowledge in postural, physical and mind sciences are explored.
1 hrs - 2 hrsEnviromental related therapies, such as, music and sound therapy, grounding, earthing, food therapy, sunshine, light therapy, forest medicine, mud therapy, gathering Ling, and the use of cold and heat.
2 hrs - 2.5 hrsCommunication research to increase patient compliance, understanding and retention are explored. Including the research, assessment and measurement.
2.5 hrs - 3.5 hrsThe current research for food, habits, smoking and alcohol and patient results. How this is combined with successful patient outcomes.
3.5 hrs - 4.5 hrsTips for when patients progress is impeded, stalled or stopped. How to manage patient outcomes and expectations.
Teacher
More...
This course is a good overview of several factors involved in client retention, client progress plateaus, and ways to work together with other modalities and give your clients more ways to help themselves. Cameron does a good job of relating things back to Chinese and Japanese medicine, and really hones in on clinical applications and on the literature. Grace G.United States of America