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"I believe that, through patient and practitioner re-education, understanding and therapeutic application, we can change the burden of persistent pain in our society." says Dr. Richard. Learn more with him.
Dr. Richard McIlmoyle graduated in 1994 with a BSc. in biochemistry, from McMaster University, and in 1999 with his Doctor of Chiropractic degree, from Logan College. Most recently (2018) he completed a Post Graduate Certificate in Pain Management from the University of Alberta. He has been practicing as a chiropractor since 2000 in Toronto, Hamilton, and Victoria. Since 2002 he co-owns, and practices in, a thriving interdisciplinary clinic.
He has spent 17 years as a neurology instructor at a local massage college and for the past several years has worked with PainBC, which has a goal to “Empower health care providers with the education, tools, and skills they need to improve the lives of people living with pain.”
He is a member of the Canadian Chiropractic Association (CCA), British Columbia Chiropractic Association (BCCA), International Association for the Study of Pain, Work Wellness and Disability Prevention Institute, and the Canadian Academy of Pain Management. As a member of the BCCA Best Practices Task Force, he has collaborated in the completion of a draft framework for Chiropractic best practices.
In 2019, he was appointed as a member of the Board of Directors for the Canadian Chiropractic Research Foundation, subsequently accepting the appointment to the role of Chair of the research committee.
His talk will explore the change he sees as crucial to alter resource allocation for research on manual therapy, with spinal manipulative therapy as the exemplar. Should we continue to throw money at chasing clinical prediction rules for specific modality application.
"I believe that, through patient and practitioner re-education, understanding and therapeutic application, we can change the burden of persistent pain in our society." says Dr. Richard. Learn more with him.
Dr. Richard McIlmoyle graduated in 1994 with a BSc. in biochemistry, from McMaster University, and in 1999 with his Doctor of Chiropractic degree, from Logan College. Most recently (2018) he completed a Post Graduate Certificate in Pain Management from the University of Alberta. He has been practicing as a chiropractor since 2000 in Toronto, Hamilton, and Victoria. Since 2002 he co-owns, and practices in, a thriving interdisciplinary clinic.
He has spent 17 years as a neurology instructor at a local massage college and for the past several years has worked with PainBC, which has a goal to “Empower health care providers with the education, tools, and skills they need to improve the lives of people living with pain.”
He is a member of the Canadian Chiropractic Association (CCA), British Columbia Chiropractic Association (BCCA), International Association for the Study of Pain, Work Wellness and Disability Prevention Institute, and the Canadian Academy of Pain Management. As a member of the BCCA Best Practices Task Force, he has collaborated in the completion of a draft framework for Chiropractic best practices.
In 2019, he was appointed as a member of the Board of Directors for the Canadian Chiropractic Research Foundation, subsequently accepting the appointment to the role of Chair of the research committee.
His talk will explore the change he sees as crucial to alter resource allocation for research on manual therapy, with spinal manipulative therapy as the exemplar. Should we continue to throw money at chasing clinical prediction rules for specific modality application.