How can K.O.R.E. help you?

No matter how careful we are, we all have been impacted by some trauma throughout our lives. This may be falls we have had as a child, collisions playing sport, impacts whilst driving, as well as the usual day-to-day lurches, trips and tumbles.

K.O.R.E. uses a system of standardised tests to check areas of the body, and where any imbalances lie. These tests will indicate where there may be misalignments in parts of the spine, cranial bones and internal organs.

Each test then maps out a blueprint of where problems are occurring, so that an individual treatment plan can be formulated.

What can be expected during a treatment session?

During the first appointment, we take a full medical history, including any medical diagnoses, and notes of any current medication. We ascertain the cause of the current problem, and where the focus of treatment needs to be.

This problem may relate to any traumas, impacts or accidents from the past.

We aim treatment at the current problem, and this may also go on to reveal deeper imbalances. This can include incidences in the past that the body has assimilated and then created coping mechanisms, potentially putting the whole body out of balance and culminating in the current ailment.

For this reason, the first appointment is slightly longer than subsequent treatment sessions.

Testing

K.O.R.E.’s muscle testing aims to initiate an immune system response to get your body to recognise the root cause of an issue and begin the healing process before therapy even begins. We always begin and end with muscle testing, where you will be asked to raise your arms and legs and ‘hold’ them against gentle pressure. 

Muscle testing takes between 5-10 minutes depending upon what is uncovered, and whether further tests are required, and alerts us to where the focus of treatments should be.

Re-evaluation

At the end of each full treatment, any tests that failed during the initial assessment are repeated in order to engage the body in the healing process. This ensures that we:

  • Assess progress
  • Ensure that the treatments are effective
  • Communicate to the body’s healing system