| 8-min read |
See The Forest - By Dana Bergquist -
14 | LIFEWEST.EDU/LIFELINES-MAGAZINE/
W
e learn from the very beginning of chiropractic college that dis-ease is caused by subluxations, and subluxations are caused by the 3 Ts: Thoughts, Traumas & Toxins. As chiropractors, we promote adaptability in the body by adjusting subluxations, and we address the 3 Ts through lifestyle recommendations. “Take care of yourself”-type messaging along with diet, exercise and other lifestyle factors are widely conveyed. Communicating the importance of personal responsibility and healthy lifestyle is wonderful and necessary and…often misses the forest for the trees. I think chiropractors are well positioned to dig a little deeper. As chiropractors we want to care for the cause, not the symptom, right? Working with patients to facilitate the integration of subluxations is a big piece of this, but I’m proposing that to be more wholistic and vitalistic, we need to be better equipped to work with the Thoughts, Traumas and Toxins beyond lifestyle recommendations. If the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United States are related to health behaviors and lifestyle factors [1], then why am I saying that lifestyle recommendations aren’t digging deep enough? Well, it appears that without addressing the underlying cause of those ‘unhealthy’ lifestyle factors, then we will never be able to help our patients truly heal.
During the 1980’s, a Kaiser preventative medicine clinic in San Diego California, specializing in lifestyle modification for the treatment of obesity, was experiencing high levels of “dropout”, with over 50% of patients ending their treatment early. Interestingly, patients that were dropping out of the program early were those who had been experiencing the greatest success in weight loss, though short of their weightloss goals. Why would people who were 300 pounds overweight lose 100 pounds, and then drop out when they were on a roll? This baffled the clinic’s director and physician, Dr. Vincent Felitti, so he and the clinic staff decided to conduct follow-up interviews with all their patients to better understand why some patients were dropping out early, and others would stick with it. What they found was that a disproportionately high number of patients who had dropped out of the program had experienced childhood abuse. As his patients continued to reveal to him their history of abuse, he felt disturbed and unprepared. He thought, “This can’t be true. People would know if that were true. Someone would have told me in medical school.” It appeared that the patients had developed coping strategies that were connected to their weight gain. As patients had begun implementing strategies to help lose weight, they had inadvertently removed strategies that had helped them cope with their past experiences of abuse; For example, eating to sooth. Without incorporating additional coping strategies, many patients experienced higher rates of anxiety and depression under treatment for their obesity, and subsequently dropped out of the treatment program. Dr. Felitti didn’t know it at the time, but his discovery would help to
#LIFELINES | 15
SEE THE FOREST
“Subluxation is a symptom of interference and not a cause” - Dr. B.J. Palmer -
ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES: A GLIMPSE INTO THE CAUSE OF DISEASE