October 2003
Wellness and Network Spinal Analysis newly positioned
by Dr. Donald Epstein
Network Spinal Analysis
(NSA) has evolved over the past 20 years and most recently has been
influential in expanding and articulating the wellness paradigm. NSA is an
evidenced‑based approach to wellness and body awareness. Gentle precise
force applications to the spine cue the brain to create new wellness
promoting strategies. Two unique healing waves develop with this work. They
are associated with spontaneous re‑organization, re‑distribution and release
of spinal tension.
Greater awareness of
self and conscious awakening of the relationships between the body, mind,
emotion, and expression of the human spirit are realized through NSA care.
Doctors of chiropractic also use NSA as an application for the
identification and self‑regulation of vertebral subluxation patterns, spinal
tension, and autonomic defense posture and accompanying osseous and muscular
structural states.
NSA is currently taught
exclusively to chiropractors and chiropractic students, in relationship to
chiropractic practice and subluxation‑based care. It is applied through a
series of four levels of care. This application combines the practitioner's
clinical assessment of refinements in self‑regulation of spinal cord tension
patterns, unique "self‑ organizing" spinal sensory motor strategies within
the recipient of care and the patients' self‑assessments of personal
wellness and changes in lifestyle.
Practitioners are
taught to practice consistent with the Council on Chiropractic Practice
(CCP) guidelines and the canon of ethics of the Association for Network
Care. However, there are other elements within the "Epstein Models" that NSA
rests upon that supersede traditional chiropractic thought. The Models are
soon to be offered through the curriculum of a certificate program of
"Wellness Education and Outcomes Assessment" offered by Florida Atlantic
University in Boca Raton.

This chart describes NSA in relationship to its chiropractic and
non‑chiropractic elements. The doctor of chiropractic, utilizing NSA in
relationship to the Epstein Model of vertebral subluxation is represented by
the middle intersecting ovals. Notice that NSA practice can expand and
overlap the chiropractic practice through its applications and outcomes into
elements of wellness (education) practice

As
chiropractic, the care is in relationship to both the practitioner's
clinical health and spinal assessments and the patient or practice member's
self‑assessment of their personal experience of spinal and neural integrity
and wellness advancements.
When NSA is applied as a form of wellness education care, and not in
relationship to finding causation, or attempting to remedy any condition,
then the practitioner will no longer make assessments as to the patient's
health. Instead the client will make his/her personal assessments relative
to the internal experience of the world and his/her somatic experience.
NSA
care, applied in this way will be to advance new properties of wellness
including one's access to what has been described as the transcendent source
of wisdom. Please note that this right side of the chart is beyond the
practice of chiropractic, or any other profession.
Therefore, any chiropractor, utilizing NSA in whole or in part, falls within
the middle ovals, as an avant‑garde wellness practitioner utilizing outcomes
to assess patient improvement in conjunction with the patient or practice
member's active participation as a recipient of care.

Epstein Models
Following are the
Epstein Models upon which NSA is based.
1. Somatic
Awareness. Cognitive
awareness of body structures, including the spine, is an essential component
of healing and wellness. Cognitive somatic and spinal awareness, with the
ability to verbalize the experience, suggests utilization of higher cortical
centers. The inability to perceive, process and verbalize body sensations,
emotions, and tension patterns limits the range of one's adaptive responses.
This promotes the body‑mind disconnection that can create and sustain spinal
distortions and vertebral subluxation.
Care is taken to
establish and refine capacities, strategies and pathways that promote and
nurture a wider range of auto regulatory and self‑empowering responses and
choices. It is proposed that the body cannot self regulate adaptation to a
situation if the neural pathways that promote observation of the area and
choice in response are inhibited.
2. Spinal and
Neural Integrity. There are
stability sub‑systems that regulate the dynamic state known as spinal and
neural integrity. These systems must be able to rapidly share energy and
information with one another. Spinal and neural integrity as an expression
of spinal and neural wellness is associated with instantaneous modification
of perception and adaptive responses to a changing environment.
Clinical assessments
and interventions must establish, or nurture mechanisms and processes to
reorganize these sub systems' relationships with one another and the
environment. The emotional subsystem is believed to control the sensory and
motor sensitivity (gain) at every spinal level and participates with the
passive, active, and neural control subsystems in modifying spinal and
neural integrity.
3. Wellness.
The concepts of wellness and illness exist on a continuum. One's position
along the wellness‑illness continuum represents the realm through which one
experiences his or her body, circumstances, symptoms, sense of self,
relationships, and the world in general.
Neither wellness nor
illness exist in a direct relationship with pathology or lack thereof.
Wellness‑illness is a function of one's internal experience, and not one's
circumstance. Therefore, an individual may exhibit various stages of
pathology, remission or health regardless of where he or she is on the
wellness‑illness scale.
Wellness and illness
include domains such as: physical, mental and emotional state and social
well‑being. They are based upon one's subjective experience of self and
one's health beliefs. It is possible to objectify these domains through
specific survey instruments that ask the individual to report their
perceptions.
4. Vertebral
Subluxation. Two classes of
vertebral subluxations exist, each having different etiology and responding
to a different force application. The structural (Class A) subluxation is a
segmental distortion associated with a compromise of the intervertebral
structures. This is most commonly produced by a localized physical trauma or
is adaptive to spinal cord tension patterns.
The Class B, or
facilitated subluxation is associated with lack of recovery from emotional,
mental, or chemical stress and is associated with a state of adverse
mechanical spinal cord tension and "multiple cord tensions." This is a
product of stress physiology and attendant stress posture, and is best
addressed through a gentle touch as an oscillatory impulse at or in the
vicinity of the vertebral/dural relationships in the cervical and sacral‑coccygeal
spine.
The application and
integration of these four models is consistent with both traditional
chiropractic objectives and practice, and academic wisdom.
However, if any of
these models are applied in the absence of the Epstein Model of vertebral
subluxation, the contribution of NSA to the chiropractic objective is
negated. This arises because NSA may also be applied as a form of wellness
education, without any representation of diagnosing, treating, attending to,
remedying, correcting, preventing or advising in relationship to any
condition ‑‑ including subluxation, malady or symptom.
In order for an
individual to practice NSA within the context described, it will require at
least three and one‑half years of post‑graduate study, including a distance
learning certificate in the program mentioned. These individuals will not be
taught to identify or adjust subluxations, nor will they practice
chiropractic or any health restorative or maintenance discipline.
In the meantime, NSA
continues to expand the application of wellness care and outcomes
assessments for the chiropractic profession. This involves clinical
application for the correction and self‑regulation of vertebral
subluxation(s). It also provides for the development of new sensory motor
strategies to assist in spinal and neural integrity. This is practiced in
relationship to the identification, classification and force application to
correct and promote patient self‑regulation of vertebral subluxation(s).
NSA will continue to
provide wellness care that expands beyond what has been considered usual and
customary as a ceiling to care. When NSA wellness care is instituted, the
NSA chiropractor is encouraged to inform the patient or practice member that
wellness care and wellness education is beyond the scope of traditional
chiropractic. Practitioners are advised not to bill any third party for pure
wellness care, or services not in relationship to the vertebral subluxation.
(To learn more about
NSA and the Association for Network Care go to
www.Associationfornetworkcare.com. To find out about NSA and wellness
programs, go to www.Innateintelligence.com , or call Innate Intelligence,
Inc. at 303/678‑8086.)