新生儿脑评分与颅骶筋膜治疗效果评价研究方案

Carol E. Newell, M. Newell, B. Gillespie
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摘要

本研究计划探讨脑评分和颅骶筋膜治疗在新生儿中的应用。我们将使用完善的研究方法来衡量脑评分在评估新生儿神经生理学和颅骶筋膜治疗对新生儿和准妈妈的有效性方面的可重复性和可靠性,以显著降低许多慢性儿科疾病的发病率。主要假设认为胎儿和分娩创伤可能导致组织紧绷,损害神经生理,并播下儿童慢性疾病的种子。由于基因在受孕时就会留下身体特征的印记,未经治疗的创伤也可能给新生儿留下终身慢性疾病的印记。由于临床经验表明颅骶筋膜疗法对患有这些慢性疾病的儿童、幼儿和婴儿是有效的,因此通过归纳推理,最合乎逻辑的步骤是提出研究方法来调查脑评分和颅骶筋膜疗法对新生儿的实践。如果大脑评分被证明是一个可重复且可靠的测试,它将提醒专业人员注意高危新生儿,并提示颅骶筋膜治疗以改善神经生理学。我们打算通过新生儿治疗来证明最初的假设,以减轻9个月的胎儿和分娩创伤,显著降低儿童15种常见疾病的发病率。第二种假说认为,母亲可能在胎儿和分娩期间将创伤通过自己的颅骶筋膜张力模式传递给新生儿,最终导致儿科疾病。我们打算证明预防性颅骶筋膜治疗对新生儿神经生理有显著的积极作用,从而降低未来儿科疾病的发病率。
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A Research Proposal Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Brain Score and Craniosacral Fascial Therapy for Neonates
This research proposal investigates the utility of the Brain Score and craniosacral fascial therapy for newborns. We will use sound research methodology to measure the Brain Score’s reproducibility and reliability in assessing neonatal neurophysiology and the effectiveness of craniosacral fascial therapy on newborns and mothers-to-be to significantly decrease the incidence of many chronic pediatric diseases. The primary hypothesis states that fetal and birth trauma may cause tissue tightness, impair neurophysiology, and sow the seeds of chronic illness in children. As the genes imprint physical traits at conception, untreated trauma may also stamp newborns with chronic conditions for life. Because clinical experience has shown craniosacral fascial therapy to be effective for children, toddlers, and infants with these chronic conditions, the most logical step through inductive reasoning is to propose research methods to investigate the practice of the Brain Score and craniosacral fascial therapy for neonates. If the Brain Score proves to be a reproducible and reliable test, it will alert professionals to at-risk newborns and indicate craniosacral fascial therapy to improve neurophysiology. We intend to prove the primary hypothesis by showing that newborn treatment to mitigate nine months of fetal and birth trauma significantly decreases the incidence of fifteen common diseases in children. The secondary hypothesis states that mothers may pass trauma through their own craniosacral fascial strain patterns on to their newborns during the fetal and birth period to eventually cause pediatric illness. We intend to prove that preventative craniosacral fascial therapy for mothers-to-be has a significantly positive effect on neonatal neurophysiology, thus decreasing the incidence of future pediatric disease.
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