Naturopathy And Classical Osteopathy
Naturopathy is incorporated into classical osteopathy and they work together. Classical osteopathy adjusts and reorganises whereas diet and lifestyle changes will often have a cleansing effect or provide nutrition that normal physiology requires. This will help reduce the chances of symptoms returning and will help educate the individual about how to maintain improvements in health and look after themselves. During treatment I will discuss this and make simple recommendations that are easy to live with and follow.
Definition of a Naturopath:
Naturopathy is an approach to health care which aims to promote, restore and maintain health. The following principles underpin the practise of Naturopathy:
The Healing Power of Nature: There is a ‘vital force’ or ‘life force’ which drives the self-healing or self-correcting mechanisms of the body.
The Triad of Health, which describes the connection and interaction between the structural, biochemical and mental/emotional components of all living beings.
Dysfunction in one area invariably leads to disruption elsewhere.
The Uniqueness of the Individual: People are genetically, biochemically, structurally and emotionally different from one another. Each person responds in a unique way to influences whether they are mental/emotional, structural, nutritional, social or cultural.
Naturopaths also recognise that:
Health is more than the absence of disease. It is dependent upon a multitude of factors and is a reflection of a harmonious interaction with our environment.
Acute disease processes are different from chronic processes. The acute response is the body’s attempt to restore health often through enhanced processes of elimination. Suppression of such healing processes contributes to the potential for chronic breakdown.
Disease processes involve activation of the body’s homeostatic mechanisms. Health is homeostasis - a dynamic equilibrium.
The individual requires suitable foods for nourishment, clean water, fresh air and sunlight, as well as appropriate exercise, rest and relaxation.
Prevention is preferable to cure.
The defining elements of Naturopathic practice are that Naturopaths:
Work with the body’s own self-correcting mechanisms or efforts to maintain homeostasis.
Endeavour to address all aspects of the Triad of Health.
Regard education and co-operation of the patient as highly as treatment of the patient.
Address lifestyle factors which are contributing to the problem and re-educate the patient into a lifestyle more conducive to health.
Aim to establish health on a cellular level by improving circulation and innervation, nutrition, detoxification and elimination.