GOING BACK TO NORWAY
Back to the teeth, I will tell you a little story. About five years
ago I decided to go back to the valley where I grew up in as a child
in Norway. It is a mountain valley. When I returned to my home there
had been a major revolution that had gone through the valley since
I had left 60 years ago. They had painted the houses a different
color and now they had refrigerators which were all the same colors
as their stoves! But aside from those changes, nothing else seemed
to have happened. Same houses. A few extra places had sprung up,
but not many. But to my dismay, the friends I grew up with, the friends
I went to school with -we were all in one class, seven grades in
one classroom, the friends I used to ski with, the friends I use
to hang around with they were mostly gone, many were dead .
I found one person still alive. I believe the reason was partly because
of the dentistry we had as children. The dentist visited us two times
a year. He drove up to the valley in his car, took out his drill,
which was driven by a pedal. He did only two things, he either extracted
teeth or he put in amalgam, which incidentally consisted of 50% pure
mercury and approximately 50% copper. A pretty toxic dosage of metal
to be stuffed into your mouth (this tradition is still being pursued
by most dentists today).
If the traveling dentist extracted teeth, he put some cotton in
the dental cavity, and that was the end of that. So this form of
dental care often created dental and jaw trauma which created bacterial
infections. It was only a matter of time before the infection would
hit the body and the person would go down.
With the overload of amalgam we received, we got mercury toxicity
in vital organs in the body, and in addition was a breakdown of the
immune system, leading to early death. This was hard for me to see,
but it also made me acutely aware of the shortcomings of the modern
health care system. Again I realized the importance of taking
care of the body in its natural form and being able to read it as
such.
Interviewer: So when you were young,
did you have teeth pulled or filled with amalgam?
Jelstrup: Yes.
Interviewer; Both?
Jesltrup: Yes and it nearly
killed me. I hit maturity with this in1990, and it nearly took my
life. But in the process I became an expert. Because of the bio-phonics
and other testing methods, I knew what was happening. I knew where
the problem was. I went through three jaw surgeries alone, to dig
out the amalgam. I became an expert in bridgework. I became an expert
in re-establishing the proper planes in the mouth. I worked with
the best dentists here in the Northwest and it turned out to be my
blessings.
Interviewer: Who did you personally
see as a dentist?
Jelstrup: There was a variety of them and
I considered them all the best at the time. I am very thankful
to have worked with an orthodontist in Redmond. With him we developed
a dental splint device designed to decrease cranial pressure, and
designed to move the face into proper position where there were misalignments
or genetic malformations. This was monumental in the dental
corrective field. All of the people I worked with at the time were
pioneers. This is the primary reason why I have not returned to Norway
to practice. Simply because we have established such a strong network
in the Northwest with MDs, dentists, orthodontists, osteopaths, chiropractors
and the like.
The teeth are something we watch very closely. We watch, as I mentioned
before, the cranium. Then, gradually we get into the nutrition habits
which are hygiene. We pay close attention to blood types and nutrition.
I have found this to be very valuable and finally, we pay close attention
to the emotional wellbeing of the individual and make sure the individual
does not have too many balls in the air which would interfere with
their health. If they do, we help them to get the appropriate help
to erase the negative programming which is running his and her life.
We use terms in the clinic like ‘to get your past in your
past’, ‘past history in your history not past history
in your present.’ If your past history is in your present you
are run by your past and we are trying to open up your present and
your future for - shall we say opportunities. We do not want to automatically
be run by traumas we keep remembering or repeating. We
work quite a bit with this, and refer people to the appropriate persons.
One of the best people we have worked with over the years is Patricia
Wampler. She is a counselor on the Eastside here who has done a lot
of good work and there are many others as well.
Interviewer: Now I feel like I am missing
out on all this C.J. When I come in I just get my neck adjusted and
then I leave.
Jelstrup: Sometimes there is
not more. Some people have whiplash, and this is my focus. If they
have a happy relationship, if they know what to eat and how to take
care of themselves, I focus primarily on the meningeal system. But
if their husband loses his job, they are sitting there with two kids
and they are scared out of their wits, you have to do other things
before you can access the meningeal system.
ANXIETY AND SIMPLE SUPPLEMENTATION
Jelstrup: There is one more thing I
would like to mention. There has been a clinical observation of mine
over the last 10 years and I credit this discovery totally to Dr.
Versandal. Not infrequently over time, we meet people who are
ridden with anxiety. I never quite understood this to begin with – I
figured, well, take a hike, and go into nature, get some fresh air
and maybe things will go better. Then I learned anxiety is primarily
an emotional reaction to a chemical state which affects the
brain and how it functions. Dr.Versandal pinpoints this chemical
state to be associated with a little part of the thyroid called the
T1 mechanism. This is partly responsible for the electrical
charge, so to speak, of the brain. When this goes onto the
dimmer, anxiety sets in.
There can be dyslectic patterns; there can be other adverse behavior
patterns. Most often though as a low undertone for all these cases
is a state of ongoing anxiety. There are few things which can disrupt
your life more than anxiety. You can have pain, and still cope.
But once you hit anxiety, you lose the ability to cope. Versandal
pinpointed this, and through a company called Standard Process Laboratories,
they developed a substance called ‘Min-Tran’.
We used bio-phonics to identify the stress patterns associated with
the T1 deficiency. We started to research it in the clinic. We
started to check people for it. For instance, there are certain body
forms which are more prone to have a T1 deficiency then other forms,
and we started to pinpoint them, and acquire case histories.
I can mention just one example we had in the clinic. A
husband had lost his wife, his family, lost everything he owned,
a well to do person from this area. He ended up sleeping in his car,
basically. He came wandering in one day and we detected this. We
put him on a high dose of Min-Tran, six tables in the morning, six
in the evening, and in a matter of three months, he probably reversed
his whole behavior pattern. In the matter of a couple of years
now, he has completely rebuilt himself. He is back being a
successful person again. He made peace with his family and started
to see he aberrant behavior patterns he had that had been generated
through anxiety trying to gain extreme control over his family,
which had led him to his loss. We have seen some amazing things
in situations like this. What is so good about this is if you
take Min-Tran, you cannot only control anxiety, but many other emotional
patterns tied in with it. It is amazing.
Interviewer: What does Min- Tran stand
for?
Jelstrup: Min-Tran is a combination of kelp,
sea minerals and alfalfa and a few other things made by Standard
Process Laboratories. Very inexpensive. High dosage for one person
would be less then $100 for a full year supply. It is also very healthy
for the body. There are good things in it. We find certain people
have a higher need for these certain supplements.
Now I believe if we researched this more, we could change the form
and change the structure therefore changing the anxiety patterns.
Although sometimes it is impossible there is always a possibility
you might make the need for the supplement obsolete. However as a
first-aid support which is also nutritious you most likely would
eliminate things like Ritalin, and many other drugs, simply by common
sense nutrition and high supplementation of a substance like Min-Tran.
For us, this has been a major discovery. Right now we are attracting
these high anxiety ridden people as patients, like fleas on a dog.
Simply because we have figured it out, so then they come in. It is
like they sense there is a solution. The beauty of this is - the
solution is simple. This has been an example again of the chemical
part of the triangle.
Of course we deal quite a bit with nutrition but the over all picture
is – we try to balance the triangle. We try to observe who
we are dealing with, observe the needs of the person, balance the
triangle every visit and every time we deal with this
person, make sure the meningeal system is clear and in balance. I
think this is basically it.
Interviewer: What will you be teaching in
Denmark.?
Jelstrup: I will be teaching a course
together with my colleague Jeanne Kreider and Bob Shane, a remarkable
physicist. We will be teaching a comprehensive system of diagnosis
based on the triangle concept and based on the work we are doing
with bio-phonics. We are making it open to MD and other healthcare
providers, like massage therapists, and nurses. As I said in the
beginning we are dealing with basically two systems; emergency medicine
and preventive care. This is basically where the division is. The
more knowledge we have in preventive care, the more we are going
to be able to influence how things are doing in the society at large
in healthcare.
B.J. PALMER D.C.
Interviewer: What was your specific
training, which got you into this? Where did you start?
Jelstrup: My specific training was chiropractic.
I graduated from Palmer College in 1963. I spent five years traveling
across the United States interning in different clinics just to learn. I
had a hard time digesting what they served in school. I was
not quite sure about this. In school you get just academic knowledge.
I was fortunate enough to work with B.J.Palmer. He was the founder
of modern chiropractic so to speak. I derived a lot of observations
from him. He put a vast emphasis on hygiene.
Interviewer: Hygiene meaning nutrition?
Jelstrup: Hygiene meaning lifestyle,
how you live, and what kind of bugs affects you, nutrition, sanitation,
water, the works. What he pointed out as I remember from
him to this day is all the gains we had in this century have not
been from the field of medicine but from the fields related to sanitation,
including the water departments in different cities, etc. He also
taught me some keen observations we are still working with in the
clinic today. There is a timing in the nervous system which affects
the health. There are questions we still have not answered but they
gave me a lot of good bones to chew on in the meantime. His philosophy,
his sense of direction in the health field, I consider to be revolutionary.
Later on, after an assorted practice in the late 60’s in the
United States I went to Denmark where I practiced and worked with
Julia Voeldan. She was the founder of the Voeldan Health Centers
in Denmark. In her time this represented some of the largest natural
rehabilitation health centers in Northern Europe. She had based her
centers on the theory she developed, called the Voeldan Theory, which
was dealing with the electromagnetic principles of the human body. She
then broke it down to the very core. From her I learned what herbs
might be good for one person can be detrimental for another.
It all depends on the form. By understanding the form, you can read
if a person is electro-positive or electro-negative. She formulated
a theory by describing how people have central nervous system with
opposite electric spins if I may use a vague term like this. It took
me a little while to learn her theory. Once I learned it, I began
to wonder ‘how come everyone doesn’t see it?” And
out of this I gradually learned to observe why opposites attract
in people. You see it in animals, you see it all over. These opposites
have very different needs. So Voeldan taught me to observe the electromagnetic
principles in people down to a very core level; down to the electromagnetic
spin of individuals. It is a theory as well as it is an observation.
You can apply the theory in practice and with simple applied kinesiology
you can literally prove the theory.
I worked closely with her and became an advisor to her group. She
was in her heyday running 100 bed units in Denmark where people stayed
there one week at a time learning to deal with different ailment,
from chronic arthritis, exhaustion to cancer. She has been a major
beacon in preventive health care in Denmark.
Later I had a practice in Norway in Lillehammer. Then I decided
to return to the West Coast, simply because I felt a need for more
knowledge within the structural field. This turned out to be my blessing
because out here I came in contact with very good people.
Interviewer: When did you come to
the United States?
Jelstrup: I came back in 1972. At the
time I told my patients in Lillehammer I would be back in three
months [laughter] Whenever I return now to Lillehammer they
always ask, ‘when are the three months going to be up’?
[Laughter] Meaning now, it is their grandchildren who are asking!
Interviewer: You know Dr. Albert Berti in
Canada? He is also well known in certain circles for having
tremendous success with head injury cases which are notoriously difficult
to treat.
Jelstrup: Yes he is a delight. I talked to
him just a few days ago. For him, the sun rises and sets with the
Atlas- mechanism. In his opinion, and in the opinion of the
people who practice the upper cervical specific approach it is through
the leverage mechanism of the Atlas - Occipital area when applying
the proper adjustments to this area, you can literally control the
whole meningel system. I respect his views. I respect his work. However
I do not think it is complete.
I have frequently seen many cases where people have been adjusted
for a long time, for whiplash and have not improved, simply because
the doctors were not able to access the cranial component. Sometimes
they do, however many times they do not and the patients ends up
coming back repeatedly. Whereas in our clinic we are totally committed
to making the patient independent of the clinic and only return to
the clinic when he or she senses that their system is out of proper
homeostasis. This can be due to life style – stress factors
and those who do not have time to exercise.
When it comes to exercise I constantly remind people there is only
one exercise. This is walking. Due to the inherited genetic
patterns of walking gait pattern is what started us, perhaps
200,000 years ago - who knows how far back. This pattern will elicit
a certain effect on the brain which will affect the whole body beneficially.
TRAINING AND TEACHING
Interviewer: What does your colleague
do? The same thing or something different?
Jelstrup: Jeanne works also with structure
and we are in alignment with our philosophies in patient care.
She was educated in critical nursing and then took extra training
in massage therapy. She also has her doctorate in nutrition and alternative
health care. She trained with a well known chiropractor Dr. M.L.
Rees who developed ‘a hands on healing technique’ considered
Bio-Vibrational Medicine and etheric modification. She has some very
good information.
Along with this, she is the female principle at the Bellevue Wellness
Center. She senses things I am do not and has more nurturing capacities.
Because of her nursing background she is exceptionally very good
in analytical work. Integration of many healing techniques is her
forte. She also teaches as I mentioned bio-phonics as well as a whole
system for natural healing.
Interviewer: I remember speaking
with some chiropractors who mentioned they are very disenchanted
with chiropractic.
Jelstrup: I have seen many chiropractors;
many doctors just talk about their investments, because they can
not stand their practice anymore. It is a common phenomenon you often
see. They have lost interest in what they are doing. There was not
any spark there in the first place. If you are interested in this
work, this becomes your life, it becomes your hobby and it becomes
everything. I consider myself extremely lucky I fell into this. The
only reason I fell into it was I had heard about chiropractic when
I still lived in Norway. All the medical clinics there had one thing
in common. They threw me out of the office when I mentioned chiropractic.
They literally asked me to disappear right then. They pointed to
the door and said OUT. Being a stubborn Norwegian this chiropractic
no-no really caught my interest.
Interviewer: Why did they do
this?
Jelstrup: I do not know. I imagine
they thought Chiropractic was the worst. They had such feeling against
it. I mean really intense feelings I had to investigate [laughter].Plus
it was the opportunity - being 21 years old to hitchhike on a boat
to America, an opportunity to see the world. For me this was my ticket.
Interviewer: Now your daughter Kristine
is also interested in alternative medicine too?
Jelstrup: Yes, she has done remarkably well
with it. She is also a massage therapist and has moved into the preventive
health care field as a practitioner in Boston.
A FIVE MILE RADIUS OF SEATTLE AND BELLEVUE
Interviewer: How do you see what goes
on in America or at least in Seattle compared to Norway for health
care?
Jelstrup: I think the field of preventative
care here and the research we are doing among certain groups of practitioners
is phenomenal. I think we have more knowledge within five square
miles of the Seattle-Bellevue area than anywhere else I can think
of in the world right now. I do no know anywhere on this planet that
can match the knowledge you can find in the northwest.
There are some very dedicated people here. I would like to mention
Jonathan Collin, MD., too, as a dedicated man to preventive care.
He is a beacon. As well as Leo Bolles MD., who has a taken a stand
for preventive care. Who has been outstanding in spite of the extreme
harassment he has sustained from the local American Medical associations.
Then we have people like Patti Wampler in the mental health field.
There are so many people out there with such a deep sense of knowledge
about health care. They have a dedication to the principle stating
the human body is capable of correcting the triangle of wellbeing
when given a chance.
These people have world class capabilities. They are beginning to
teach all over the world. Canada, Europe, Eastern Europe. All these
wonderful people are right here around me in Bellevue. All of these
people are the tops. They are smack dab in my backyard. This is why
I have never returned to Norway. I stay in Norway for one month at
a time, now when I go three or four times a year. Once I am back
here, I am going, going, going all the time. When I am in Norway
I hike. I cut myself totally out of civilization. I ski and I am
into nature – period nothing else.
THE JOY OF A CASH PRACTICE
Interviewer: How long have you
been in practice in Bellevue?
Jelstrup: Since 1972
Interviewer: How many patients do you see
a year?
Jelstrup: I do not know, however
I average about 25 per day and Jeanne averages 16 -18 per day. We
are talking about near 50 people in a full days work. It is a lot
of work. It is very intense work because we work very comprehensively
with people. Our approach is to move through the body step by step
so we have all the bases covered.
Interviewer: You have primarily a cash practice
right, which is somewhat unusual?
Jelstrup: Yes. People pay and they
pay happily because they are doing better, and they are getting something
out of it and they understand there is an end to their treatment. It
is not this long dragged out three times a week thing indefinitely.
Something I learned from BJ Palmer as well – over adjusting
can be extremely harmful. I am very much accustomed to trying to
find out what the individual needs are to sustain a healthy life.
This is the primary focus in our clinic.
Interviewer: You do not really advertise
do you?
Jelstrup: Neither Jeanne or myself
has ever advertised.
Interviewer: Never?
Jelstrup: Never, Jeanne used to be booked
up to a year and now has it monitored so she is no longer booked
longer then three months at a time. For my self I am usually booked
up to one or two weeks in advance.
Interviewer: Why would people book
with Jeanne up to a year a head?
Jelstrup: Because she has developed
a following of people who want to see her. She offers such a comprehensive
treatment in 30 minute session which has made positive impacts on
the people she has treated. Both for her and myself being booked
in advance has always been this way for as long as I remember
Interviewer: It is all word of mouth,
really?
Jelstrup: Nothing else.
It is amazing when you clear whiplash injuries in two weeks how that
word spreads. Especially when people have spent $10,000 before
and they are still not cured. For this $10,000 they expect to have
this problem resolved. We decided to step out of that whole endless
treatment cycle, correct the problem and let people pay as they go.
Get them back to work, etc. For this reason we do not particularly
take any welfare cases per se. People simply have got to be willing
to take care of themselves. This brings me to a very important point
WARRIORS AND VICTIMS
Jelstrup: Early in the assessment of
the individual we try to assess the person as to his or her state
of mind, where his well being is. It is one of the first things I
do. I have two categories. I assess people as either victims
or they are warriors. [laughter]
Victims will sooner or later become wimps and warriors will sooner
or later win.
So victims turn to wimp and warriors will win. This simply means
in a more serious connotation when you take on the role of a victim
[and I do not blame people for doing this, because they have been
educated to.] the doctors says, ‘don’t worry Mrs. Jones
do not ask questions. We will take care of you and solve your problems.
Here is a medicine that will solve your problem. It has certain side
effects but basically you are in good hands.’
People let go of their primary defense system which is the brain.
They drop their brain at the foot of the doctor. If you do
more serious research on people who let go of their observational
power, or their belief in themselves you can see that the brain literally
changes and takes on a passive role because it has trusted the message
- wait and see it is not your problem. You have nothing to do with
it because the doctor will fix it. Put the brain in a passive
mode which on a chemical level sets the stage for the brain to produce
nothing. The brain is not involved. The medical profession
thinks they can stimulate that brain activity through chemicals,
and I am not quite sure they will ever be able to hit the target
fully.
If you take the position as a warrior, you want to know what is
going on and regardless of what happens to you - you take total responsibility
for your life and for your actions. Such a brain will begin to produce
the appropriate chemicals for the appropriate situation. Now this
is a generality. I look upon it as a generality, but if I am dealing
with a victim in my practice I am stopping right there until I get
this person oriented to take full responsibility for him or herself
. Otherwise what I am doing is not going to produce the desired effect
in a short time.
It is a major thing, how society has been gradually put into a victim
role verses a having good health care expectations. If you are a
victim you won’t be healthy. This is something doctors have
to really watch. What I see in the medical field is when they
want the patient’s participation; they want their participation
still strictly under their control. This is not participation at
all. As I tell the patients in the clinic. ‘You are the
doctor we are the technicians.’ You need to know and understand
and take full responsibility. You need to know too who the best people
are for your care. That is philosophical but it is a core belief
of mine.
Interviewer: Do you find for this reason
there are people you cannot treat?
Jelstrup: Yes, most people you can treat
but some people need to be sent to people who can train them to come
out of the victim role. You have got to be in the warrior role. You
have got to be in the total responsible role. Many victims will hide
themselves by saying that they are taking full responsibility, but
I can tell they are doing it more for generating attention then for
really believing in themselves. There are ways you can determine
who is a victim. When people say,’ I am so sick, I am not getting
better,’ this is a victim [laughter]. Warriors say,’ I
am going to get better, I am getting better, I am sick and tired
of being sick. My body is going to heal.” They are taking
a stand for something better for themselves. Victims are taking a
stand for a negative situation and want attention for themselves.
Interviewers: Almost through self
talk we are reinforcing the way we are going to be.
Jelstrup: This is they way the brain works.
In neurophysiology they are seeing more and more how careful surgeons
have to be during surgery because they say a word and the brain of
the patient automatically gets it. What you say under surgery can
be very detrimental to the patient. If you say something it should
be positive, because then this can go into the brain. Just like you
are building some simple software for your computer. Garbage in,
garbage out. Negative thoughts in and you are going to get the appropriate
[negative] response in the body. There is more and more research
in this field pointing to the fact we have to be careful with what
we are thinking and what we are saying.
Right now I am working with Bob Shane about investigating the possibilities
of accessing the brain and let the brain begin to access through
holographic concepts, problems like viral infections in the body.
How the brain if stimulated appropriately, and with the right information
will be able to access viral activity in the body and neutralize
it. I find this extremely exciting.
It is the work we are doing now by stimulating the brain. First,
proper diagnosis then proper detection; then proper stimulation of
different lobes of the brain.
Interviewer: Now when you say
holographic what do you mean in this context. I think of the 3D pictures
on credit cards and I doubt this is what you mean [laughter].
Jelstrup: The brain has to have a very complete
picture of what is going on. And in this picture, there is a holographic
concept and once the brain gets the information it is capable of
dealing with it. For example: attacking the virus. This has nothing
to do with the day to day work of being a chiropractor - this is
abstract. We do believe again, as B.J.Palmer pointed out many years
ago to me, if the human body is dealt with via proper hygiene - if
you can distress the system properly and access the brain properly
it is fully capable of regaining anything which has affected it.
I believe this.
I believe much of the medicine we are getting - even though it might
work for a time or seem to be helping the system in some way can
have a detrimental effect on the brain and how it functions. This
is the reason I also question many vaccines in the market today because
if they might help one particular condition it can have an oppressive
effect on many other conditions. An example of this is the vaccination
against polio. It seems in the first 10-15 years the only polio detected
has been caused solely by the vaccinations against it. This does
not mean vaccination is wholly bad. It is just we have to understand
its limits and then how to use it. Not to use it in a broad
spectrum.
Interviewer: You do not in your practice
have much in common with regular chiropractic do you?
Jelstrup: Well I would not agree with
this. We all go to school; we all get a diploma, then some of us
go a little bit further. I believe I belong to the cutting
edge of the chiropractic profession. I think there are about 10 %
of us who do, who are sharing this vision, and this common goal.
This goes for any profession. I would say about 10% of the medical
doctors I know are realizing the importance of practicing preventive
medicine and how they can integrate this work into other disciplines.
For me the 10% rule has been pretty well true.
I always like to mention how funny people have been trying to browbeat
chiropractic as a profession over the years. It is the chiropractors
who have made some of the major discoveries in the health care fields
in the last century. X-rays for instance. Palmer College had the
first x-ray machine West of the Mississippi. Chiropractors were the
first ones.
Some of the major work done in the health field today dealing with
kinesiology was discovered by chiropractors. Cranial work is primarily
a chiropractic discovery. There is some advanced work we are still
becoming aware of in neurophysiology research that chiropractic is
beginning to get a handle on. There is a timing in the human body
to follow in making corrections to it. There is a time to do
things; there is a time not to do things and there are many other
factors too.
But chiropractors have in spite of the onslaught of negative propaganda
to the tune of tens of millions of dollars, from other professions
especially the establish medical profession have been able to open
some very interesting ideas we have shared with many other health
professions.
Interviewer: I think, in fact they
are even starting to realize the advancement of natural medicine
recently has a lot to do with the success of chiropractic being able
to hold its own.. forcing the AMA to back down and to admit they
were essentially racketeering Because chiropractic is now accepted,
other disciplines are beginning to feel they have a chance
too.
Jelstrup: It reminds me also of a fight
in the British parliament over a hundred years ago, where there were
some bonesetters in England the medical profession wanted to put
an end to their chiropractic. There was one medical doctor who stood
up in front of parliament and pointed his figure at the audience
and shouted,’ if you don’t’ stop this practice
of bone-setting they are going to come back and haunt us’.
Meaning he realized there was some truth behind bone setting, when
it came to dealing with the meningeal system. Meaning the body has
ability to heal itself.
If there is proper homeostasis in the body, there will not be much
room for an average medical doctor. He will be relegated to the position
of emergency medicine. This policy position they have taken.
Now in the New England journal of Medicine, I believe it was about
10 years ago there was an article which pointed out approximately
20% of the people who come into a medical practice are able to be
helped by his skills. The other 80% of the practice helps to pay
for the office overhead. Why? They have opted for this emergency
medicine model . They have opted for drugs with detrimental effects.
They have opted for research models I find highly inadequate.
What research on drugs has ever been done to see the electromagnetic
effect on the human body? ... even though electromagnetic principles
have been the guiding principles for the whole living human body
according to Guyton’s textbook on medical physiology. Not one
pharmaceutical company has taken this into account and if they did
they would probably have to discard most of the medicine today.
This is why I believe electro- medicine will be shared by many professionals
and will be the medicine of the future.
RESOURCES
Carl H.Jelstrup DC PS, INC
Chiropractor, Cranial-Dental
CRA, Biokinetics.
Bellevue Wellness Center
One Lake Bellevue #100
Bellevue, WA 98005
425-467-6633
Jeanne Kreider, DN.,LMP.
Integrating Wellness and Natural Health Practitioner
Soft Tissue Orthopedics,
Bio-Vibrational Medicine
Cranial, BioKinetics, CRA
Bellevue Wellness Center
One Lake Bellevue Dr. Suite 100
Bellevue,WA 98005
email
Robert Shane Physicist
425-649-9526
Adverse Mechanical Tension of the Central Nervous System: An analysis
of Cause and Effect
By Alf Braig
Almquist & Wiksell International
Stockholm, Sweden
ISBN 0471041378
Albert Berti DC
200 3825 Sunset Street
Burnaby, BC
V5G 1T4
604-437-9949
Bob Feasel DDS
17713 15th NE
Shoreline,WA 98155
206-362-5400
Wayne Peace DDS
210 1077 56th St
Delta, BC V4L 2A2
wpeace@telus.net
Patricia Wampler
Personal Counslor
10505 NE 115th Lane
Kirkland,WA 98033-4359
425-825-0117