The Old Rectory Clinic, a Saltwood Osteopath Network clinic

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The Old Rectory Clinic Osteopath, Osteopaths, Osteopathy > UK > Kent-osteopath > Osteopathy in Hythe > The Old Rectory Clinic
 
 
 

The Old Rectory Clinic

Location : Saltwood, CT21

Address : The Old Rectory,Rectory Lane, CT21 4QA

Contact : Call 0845 680 0615 to make an appointment with the practice. Let us know if you need an evening or weekend appointment. Calls may be monitored or recorded.

Description : John H Stevens is the Principal Osteopath at this general Osteopathic practice. He has been practicing since 1976 and draws on his many years of experience to treat a wide variety of musculo-skeletal conditions. Does have female physio

Specialities : Lower back pain, Neck pain, Headaches, Sciatica, Nerve root problems

 
 
 

Directions to The Old Rectory Clinic

 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Osteopaths at The Old Rectory Clinic are happy to treat patients with any condition listed above.


Birth Trauma and accidents whilst a child

Psychiatrists and psychologists are well-known for stressing the importance in understanding what happens before a child is born, during the birth process and what happens in the early years. Cranial osteopaths have long recognised that the birthing process imposes enormous strain on babies, particularly if the birth is difficult or elongated. The baby's skull stretches to accomodate the narrow birth canal, but only gradually recovers its shape. After a difficult birth the process of "unmoulding" may be incomplete, leaving residual stress within the head and impacting on the nervous system. These stresses can give rise to conditions such as colic, trapped wind, regurgitation, feeding difficulties and sleep problems. In addition childhood is a time of slips, trips, falls and scrapes, each of which can potentially impose a similar burden of stress.


Sucking Difficulty

A baby having difficulty feeding may be suffering from a nerve compression. Cranial osteopaths would be quick to look at the area at the base of the skull to determine if the nerve was affected. From an osteopathic perspective, a child that has or had difficulty latching-on to its mother's nipple during the first few weeks after birth is a potential indicator that there may be some compression of an important nerve that controls the tongue. Whilst the sucking problem may clear up after a few days or weeks, the issue of compression of the hypoglossal nerve - or indeed other nerves - may not actually be resolved fully in the intial period after birth. A detailed patient history for a child should certainly cover this issue even if the condition for which treatment is being sought is rather different.

 
 
 

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