"Back-Care-Cise"
With -- Linda J. Nelson, D.C.
Videotapes -- Set of 15 videotapes, approximately 45 minutes
duration
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See pages XXX on how to order
In the case of reviewing exercise tapes one can become a bit jaded.
After all, how many ways are there to do back exercises? The
ones that have been reviewed in the pages of "DC" are of
excellent quality or they wouldn't be recommended. But what
makes one set of exercises superior to all the others?
The answer seems obvious -- the presentation. If this is the
criterion by which we judge things of similar content, then Dr.
Linda Nelson deserves a prize for one of the most attractively
presented back exercise programs I've ever seen.
The program is composed of three tapes, each beautifully boxed
and wrapped in cellophane. With each tape is a sheet of
precautionary advice. Nothing is left to chance. Nothing. Each
tape lasts approximately 45 minutes and is worth about 30 actual
minutes of increasingly difficult exercises.
My only complaint is one I've voiced before. At the beginning of
each tape is a warning that nothing should be done without
"medical" approval. It must be assumed that this is said upon
the advice of legal counsel as a form of protection. Alright
-- but would it not be just as legal if the disclaimer stated that
the viewer seek the advice of a professional health care
provider? Why do we always have to use the term "medical?" This
places us in an ancillary position to medicine, which makes about
as much sense as telling a patient to seek medical advice about
nutrition.
In spite of this emotional (for me) glitch, all three tapes are
superb in content and production values. In fact, the tapes are
far more than just tapes about exercises -- they are visual and
verbal instructors in relaxation and the maintenance of overall
health.
Dr. Nelson goes even further -- she instructs you, the doctor
-- via written material, about the physiology and the mechanics of
what is contained in each tape and then gives you advice on how
to keep the patient interested enough in the program to continue.
Well do I recall all the patients over the years to whom I have
handed sheets of exercises and told them how important it was
that they take a few minutes out of each day to exercise their
spine. The patient would usually nod as I told them that if they
brushed their teeth twice a day they should at least be willing
to devote a couple of minutes out of that day to their spine and
nervous system. If they came back a few months later I often
asked if they had kept up the exercises. Of course, they hadn't.
With modern forms of communication, pieces of paper just don't do
the job -- they never did. Fortunately, Dr. Nelson has given the
profession a taped exercise program that we can all be proud to
give to our patients as a reflection of our professional maturity
and expertise. To this point -- this is the most comprehensive
exercise program I've seen. If patient welfare is a concern, you
need to purchase the program -- there's none better.
RHT
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