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The writings of
Hippocrates (460-370 B.C.), Galen (130-200
A.D.), and even ancient manuscripts of the
Egyptians, Hindus, and Chinese reveal some
principles common to chiropractic. Its place in
modern health care is largely attributed to Dr.
Daniel David Palmer, who founded the first
chiropractic college in Davenport, Iowa, in
1895.
In the late
1800s, Dr. D.D. Palmer was a healer and a teacher trying to
understand the cause and effect of disease. His first
chiropractic adjustment was performed in 1895 on a man who
was deaf. The loss of hearing was associated with his back
"giving out" while working several years prior to meeting up
with Dr. Palmer. Dr. Palmer was able to restore his hearing
by realigning the man's spine.
The second
such adjustment provided relief for another patient who was
suffering from heart trouble. Dr. Palmer theorized that "if
two diseases, so dissimilar as deafness and heart trouble,
came from impingement, a pressure on nerves, were not other
diseases due to a similar cause?"
He began
developing his adjustment techniques and was soon getting
results with many different conditions, from colic to ear
infections to headaches. Dr. Palmer went on to found the
Palmer School of Chiropractic in Iowa. Because of its
success in healing, the new profession grew quickly.
All 50
states and many countries recognize chiropractic as a
health-care profession. Today, there are more than 50,000
chiropractors in the United States alone, and there are 26
chiropractic colleges worldwide. Chiropractic is one of
health care's fastest-growing fields simply because it's
safe, natural, drugless, non-invasive, and effective.
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