No wonder the profession sometimes tries to distance itself from all that it cannot explain, such as alternative medicine methods or a holistic approach to healing. Modern medicine is sticking to some well-trodden paths that have proven successful after years of use and helped many people. But one of my objections to its philosophy is always the same - the lack of an individual approach.
If you have inflammation, you get an antibiotic, you need to recover from hemiparesis, they send you to physiotherapy, you cough, you get a syrup.
Probably the same antibiotic was given to all of the patients that same day before you, the same with syrup, and the same with physiotherapy - you get the same treatment as other patients.
Every paresis is unique.
But I am interested in what happens to patients who are not well-prescribed therapy and who have not been helped by an antibiotic or syrup. I am interested in what happens to patients who have suffered a stroke followed by paresis, and universally prescribed therapy has not helped them and, they have failed to regain all or at least some physical functions.
What does modern medicine have to say about this?
Furthermore, how does professional medicine explain that all of my patients have regained all physical functions after my therapies?
I believe that the key is in an individualized approach to each patient because just as no patient is the same, every paresis is unique.
Recovery of a patient in a city hospital.
I am glad that I once had the opportunity to get out of my workspace and help a patient who was lying in the KBC Firule hospital at the time and prove in front of medical professionals that it is possible to help a man who suffered a stroke only 15 days earlier and was diagnosed with paresis. the right side of the body.
When Neven S. suffered a stroke, he was transported to the Firule Hospital in Split, where he was immediately hospitalized and, as usual, was kept under observation and treatment for 15 days.
It is strongly recommended that the patient rests for the first 15 days after which physiotherapy can be started. He was soon diagnosed with paresis of the right side of his body; he could not move his hand or speak.
I was called by his sister Adelina, who was instructed in my vocation and invited me to come and help him, despite not being sure if the doctors would allow me to do so.
Neven was lying motionless in bed when I arrived at the ward and there were other patients with similar diagnoses in his room.
Quick recovery in front of doctors.
The other patients immediately asked for my business card and contacted me after discharge from the hospital and successfully underwent therapy with me.
After the hospital, Neven went to Karlovac for a short rehabilitation, but even after that rehabilitation, he decided to continue treating paresis with me.
Today when I meet Neven, at first glance, it is hard to notice that he has ever suffered a stroke. After about 40 treatments, he was able to drive a car and even returned to his old job, and in his spare time, he dives.
Still, let's end in the tone in which we started this story. Doctors who saw the remarkable result of one patient diagnosed with paresis said they couldn’t believe what they saw, and as doctors, they couldn’t even accept it, but my biggest reward was when one of them said, “I don’t believe in this, but if paresis happened to me, I would come to you. "
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