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Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
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Driving Home the Benefits of
Chiropractic
A story disseminated on January 8, 2003 by the
Associated Press highlighted the benefits of
chiropractic care for truck drivers. Drs. Paul Boris
(left), and Andrew Giran (right) have an interesting
chiropractic practice at a truck stop, helping those who
cross the open road.
The article starts by relating the story of Erwin
Daugherty, a 71 year old trucker from Quinlan, Texas.
Daugherty regularly stops at the Smithton Travel Center,
a truck stop about 25 miles south of Pittsburgh, not to
get his 18 wheeler truck checked, but rather to get his
spine checked. "I’d see a chiropractor every week if I
could," Daugherty said. "About the only way I get to see
a chiropractor is one that had truck parking,’’
Daugherty said in a telephone interview Tuesday from
Texas, where he was driving a load of automobile tires.
‘‘So when the chiropractors started putting offices near
truck stops, it really made it handy for me."
Daugherty has found about nine chiropractors who operate
at or near truck stops in Arizona, Missouri and Texas.
"If I just happen to find one that's close to a truck
stop, I'll put them in my cell phone and say, 'Hey, I'm
on my way."
It is estimated that 25 million Americans visit a
chiropractor each year, according to the American
Chiropractic Association. And a growing number of the
nation's 65,000 chiropractors have decided to serve
truck drivers, a group that really needs their help.
Truckers, who spend hours on the road and sometimes do
heavy lifting, are among the most serious sufferers of
spinal problems.
Most of the chiropractors who have offices at or near
the truck stops say that the majority of the truckers
they see also have chiropractors who take care of them
when they are home. The truck-stop-doctors offer help
while the truckers are on the road. |
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