by QSM Admin | May 8, 2015 | Articles
Things We Can’t Measure: a clinical look at the phenomenology of posture Note: This paper was originally published as a pre-print of The Upper Cervical Monograph, November 2010. It was recently removed from the NUCCA website so I am publishing it on the QSM3 website...
by QSM Admin | Mar 17, 2015 | Articles
It is now 120 years since D.D. Palmer first adjusted Harvey Lillard on the 4th floor of the Ryan building in Davenport, Iowa. He termed the basic malfunction to be “subluxation”. Definition of this ‘lesion’ has been problematic ever since. The various definitions...
by QSM Admin | Oct 18, 2014 | Articles
All of us are entangled in the paradigms of our times. Even those of us who live on the edge of the current paradigms in science and medicine are still formed by them and react to them. We live within their context whether we agree with them or not. We in the West are...
by QSM Admin | Sep 18, 2013 | Articles
A Fresh Perspective By Dr. Jonathan Lazar (Class 082) Title: Who Are You Really and What Do You Want? We all look for ways to become more productive. We’ll buy new software, a new app, and come up with a new way to get things done more efficiently. And it all works...
by QSM Admin | Jan 18, 2013 | Articles
Grostic and Wernsing apparently contemporaneously and yet independently, conceived of the possibility that the frontal plane rotation of the atlas under the skull, what we have called atlas side-slip, or atlas laterality, could be measured in degrees. This idea was...