When your client has a problem you are not qualified to treat

How do you help?

By referring them to another qualified professional. Not only does this benefit your client, but it can create a network of caring practitioners whose work supports both healing and financial abundance. But how do you know to whom you should send your client? What is the best modality and how does it work? How can you find out the information you need? There are many types of complementary care, and the choices are confusing for the professional, let alone the lay person. Become an information source for your clients. The Referral Guide for Complementary Care provides thorough descriptions of twenty-five different alternative healing modalities including:

Chiropractic
Cranio-Sacral
Jin Shin Do
Hypnosis
Alexander Method
Rolfing
Polarity Therapy
Naturopathy
Reiki
Biofeedback
Therapeutic Touch
Meditation
Tai Chi
Feldenkrais
Massage
Zero Balancing
Trager
Herbalism
Ayurveda
Yoga
Homeopathy
Chinese Medicine
Reflexology
Shiatsu

Bio-Energetic Synchronization Technique

But just knowing how these methods work is not enough. We need to know for what conditions they work best. There are now many studies being done on alternative and complementary care, and these studies can be accessed via Med-line, the database for the National Institutes of Health. This book makes Med-line easy to use for the Wellness professional, and includes information on how to understand medical research. It also includes suggestions about when and how to refer, legal and qualification issues, and a discussion of mind/body medicine, a crucial factor in healing.


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