Location: Tenterden, TN30
Address: 155, High Street, TN30 6JS
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: The Coach House clinic is a long established multidisciplinary clinic in Kent.The clinic treats all age groups from babies to the elderly using cranial, structural osteopathy and acupuncture. John Stevens is the principal of the practice He qualified at the European School of Osteopathy in 1976. After graduation he worked as a junior lecturer in Anatomy and Osteopathic Technique, later lecturing in Neuroanatomy and Clinical Neurology and was instrumental in developing the neurological department over the following fifteen years. He is a very experienced clinician holding a specific interest in Neurology and problems of ageing. Over the years he has done numerous professional courses in subjects as varied as Myofascial Acupuncture, Sports injuries, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Paediatric Osteopathy, Cranial Osteopathy, Applied kinesiology and Medical electrotherapy .
Specialities: Sports injuries all joint and muscle problems. Acupuncture. Parking on site. Physiotherapist and massage therapist also hold clinics at the practice. Home visits available.
The Coach House Osteopaths Clinic - Tenterden - Tenterden has had excellent patient feedback from 1 patients since 14/10/2009 If The Coach House Osteopaths Clinic - Tenterden is unable to assist, other osteopaths in Tenterden may be convenient.
Chronic muscle stiffness is a painful condition which is difficult to treat. Doctors will routinely treat this condition, at least in the short-term, with anti-inflamatory drugs such as Diclofenac. However, these drugs have serious side-effects which can damage the liver with extended usage. As a result chronic sufferers may wish to consider alternative treatments. One simple palliative option is a relaxing, long hot bath. This will help the muscles relax. More beneficially, osteopaths will prescribe a detailed set of exercises for patients. These exercises use slow repetitive movements to lengthen the muscles. Exercises including stretching and toning, tai chi, yoga and swimming. Walking is also beneficial both to reduce muscle tension but also to help reduce stress and relax the mind. Many osteopaths have trained in what is known as the Bowen Technique which is said to be particularly well suited to this condition and also to Fibromyalgia.
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.
We are very pleased with treatment from Dr Igor. He is a wonderful man and would refer all our family and friends.
Clive & Tess, Students