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👋 Introduce yourself in 'Community Chat' with: 1. 🌏 Where you practice 2. ⏰ Years in practice 3. 🎯 What you want to improve 4. 🏆 A recent win 5. 🚀 What you want from this community
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🎉 Welcome to Chiropractic Mastery!
9.5 month old baby girl
This is actually a post about my own daughter! I find it really hard to treat my own kids when they’re small. She has been seeing two very experienced chiros (35+years in practise) - I myself have only been practicing 4 years. She was born incredibly quickly at home, labour was approx 1 hour. Then a very stressful first hour or two where the emergency team (called by the midwives who didn’t arrive in time) acted like the birth had been a medical emergency (it hadn’t) and refused to leave. Mdiwife arrived and incompetent- botched my stitches very painful etc so her start to life was far from Ideal. She is generally a very happy girl now but she doesn’t sleep without being constantly latched on for hours over night and it’s killing me! Palet is high and narrow. Expanding gradually but potentially upsetting her airways? She had slight R torticollis - now resolved. If I unlatch her she’s frantically looking for the breast and wakes upset. Tongue tie was (regretfully) cut at 5 weeks. Latch has never been painful for me but she did really struggle to stay on, slipping off, clicking etc. I’m wondering if a retained fear paralysis? But I don’t know how to resolve. Or shock from her birth? Any help very much appreciated for this insanely sleep deprived mum!
Masterclasses - If we run ONE of these first — which would you want?
We’re planning Live Clinical Trainings — and we’d love your input. As you know we’re currently receiving a high volume of daily requests for referrals to trained chiropractors in both tinnitus and tongue tie — driven by the reach and engagement of our social media content on these topics. We want these people to experience clinical excellence with skilled chiropractors — and we want to support you in upskilling to meet that demand. These people need you!! With more practitioners also choosing to learn online (and travel becoming less predictable right now 🫠🫣), we’re putting our focus into small-group, live clinical trainings inside Skool. The following - hese are designed to be practical, focused, and immediately usable in practice. OPTION 1 — Tinnitus Clinical Training 👉 3 hours total (2 x 90 min live sessions) What we’d cover: - How to assess tinnitus beyond “just the ear” - Identifying structural vs systemic drivers - What to actually DO clinically - What to say to patients (this is huge) - How to attract more tinnitus patients OPTION 2 — Tongue Tie Clinical Training 👉 3 hours total (2 x 90 min live sessions) What we’d cover: - How to properly assess tongue ties (babies → adults) - Understanding whole-body impact (jaw, airway, posture) - Pre + post release support - When to refer and how to co-manage - Building referral pathways BOTH INCLUDE: - Clinical Video Vault (real patient assessments + techniques) - Access to our existing Skool trainings:Tinnitus programTongue Tie program - Live Q&A + case discussion 👉 👉 QUESTION: If we run ONE of these first — which would you want? Comment: - TINNITUS - TONGUE TIE (or both — but tell us which you’d prioritise) Thanks for your time!!
Strep
“I have a pediatric patient who struggled with strep last year. He did really well this year after completing the Strep Protocol—until this week. He’s usually presents wiht a pink eye, which mom recognizes as his early sign that the strep may be returning. I’m curious—have you seen cases where strep reappears? They’ve been doing the protocol intermittently this winter, but not as consistently as they were last year when he was doing so well.”
Teeth
Hello!! From Mum “I have taken Amelie to the dentist from a young age and they had told me that she had weak enamels. This lead to her getting cavities very early on. I was a bit confused as we had limited sugar and were very regular with her brushing. She was breastfed for a long time and they seem to think that cavities could also have been due to her falling asleep while being breastfed. Teeth were so weak that they had placed caps to protect them. The top 4 front teeth have caps on them along with silver caps on her back teeth. Her front tooth however broke in half (even with cap on) after eating a piece of carrot. So she then had to have surgery to remove that tooth's root. She regularly goes in for check ups and she gets fillings when needed. So far, she has had one milk tooth naturally fall out and replaced with a permanent tooth. Please let me know if there's any other information you may need 😊 I really appreciate you looking into it as I haven't been able to get answers from dentists.” Photos attached
Teeth
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