Patient Management

  • £150

10S Training

  • Course
  • 31 Lessons

This course introduces the concept of the 10S Wellbeing Survey. It goes over each of the 10 S-factors, their relevance for the individual's wellbeing, and the way to test or measure it. This course gives you certification and access to the Wellbeing Age Assessment.

  • Free

Introduction to Pain Science

  • Course
  • 2 Lessons

Pain is always real This is a course that puts real pain science into the context of a real manual clinician's daily workload. It will introduce the general principles of the current thinking, some useful tips, as well as introduce a more in-depth larger presentation to be launched soon.

  • £80

Mastering Online Courses

  • Course
  • 12 Lessons

Online courses have a lot of advantages over traditional in person ones. But there’s one major disadvantage – it’s up to you to finish them! Inside this course, you’ll discover specific strategies and tools will not just keep you motivated and on track, but also ensure you learn effectively, so your new knowledge and skills “stick”, rather than forgetting most of them within a few weeks.

  • £150

Pain Science for the Manual Clinician

  • Course
  • 8 Lessons

Must know information for clinicians dealing with people in pain. Understand the person behind the pain and you have a unique insight into those difficult patients. This course will help you reprogramme patient beliefs around pain and injury to guide them back to a better life. Over 4 hours of great clinical content applicable tomorrow morning with notes, references and templates to help you.

  • £190

The SOCIAL STYLE Model™ for Chiropractors

  • Course
  • 31 Lessons

Backed up by over 4 decades of research, The SOCIAL STYLE Model™ is a simple yet powerful way to approach personalised, patient-centred communication. Rapidly identify your patients preferred style of communication, and then adapt your own style to “speak their language”. Build rapid and lasting trust, readily manage your “difficult patients” and avoid unintentional misunderstandings.