Good morning all,
I just wanted to relate an experience that I had last week and see if anyone has any feedback or comments.
I had a call from a new client who was in pain. She scheduled ASAP and during the intake she mentioned neck pain, that an x-ray showed arthritis in her neck-she had to ask her MD what that meant. Her doc wanted to do an epidural injection. From the way she spoke, I gather she didn't really care for her doctor. I spent several minutes describing the neck anatomy using my skeleton, she listened and was grateful that someone finally was explaining the anatomy to her. There were no obvious contraindications, so on the table.
The session went very well, she was very pleased with work I did on her upper back and shoulder and neck, "this is just the attention I've been looking for." nice
So, five minutes before the session was over she told me that she had a bone spur in her neck. huh? A bone spur??????? Well, now I understood about why she couldn't find relief. I finished the session and then explained to her what the bone spur could mean.
Before she left, she thanked me for the treatment and the information, she didn't reschedule and I imagine was on the way to a shot.
So, what seemed the most disturbing was that she didn't mention or understand the bone spur even after I spent over 10 minutes showing her the skeleton and asking questions. I thought my intake was diligent enough to have found this.
I'm wondering if there's some way to elicit more details from clients who are inexperienced in anatomy or lack understanding of their problems, in addition to a written/oral history?
Cheers,
jody