8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The proof is in the pictures, September 26, 2007
This review is from: The Schroth Scoliosis Three-Dimensional Treatment (Paperback)
This book is probably more oriented to physical therapists and other types of professional health care workers than the average scoliosis patient. It gets fairly technical at times. However, since there is a lack of good books on home exercises for scoliosis, the information in the book is really quite fascinating to anyone with an interest in conservative methods of treating spinal curvature.
The best part of the book is all of the before and after pictures of people with scoliosis and being able to see the actual improvement in spinal alignment after treatment with the Schroth method. The downside is that many of the exercises use specialized equipment that most people just don't have access to. All in all, it is very inspiring to be able to see what can be done for scoliosis just with nonsurgical, intensive physcial therapy and home exercise sessions.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful method; Some problems with this edition, March 10, 2008
This review is from: The Schroth Scoliosis Three-Dimensional Treatment (Paperback)
Christa Lehnert-Schroth treated scoliosis patients successfully for 50 years, using a physiotherapy method her mother had developed decades earlier, in the early 1920s. She published her manual of exercise techniques in German in 1973, and it's still selling on the German Amazon site, now in its seventh edition. The author is now retired, but the clinic still treats patients.
Though this book is primarily directed to physical therapists, it is fascinating to the patient (and I've been one) to understand exactly how the system works and to see the dramatic Before-After pictures. Some of them depict very severe cases with one side completely caved in, and you wonder how the poor patient could breathe. One who'd had cerebral palsy couldn't stand up without help, but the Schroth clinic got her walking, even climbing stairs on her own. The book proves conclusively that the doctors are wrong who tell you that physical exercises can't work. It's a real inspiration to resolve to learn and do the exercises and to help oneself or one's child, with the aid of a physiotherapist.
For the physiotherapist or other healthcare professional, the book offers both theoretical background of the Schroth method, outline of the overall treatment process, and descriptions of over a hundred exercises to choose from, including nearly 700 photos. The exercises need to be tailored to an individual patient, since each case of scoliosis is somewhat unique, though there are some general patterns.
Unfortunately this edition, the first in English, contains many errors of English spelling, grammar, and style, and some of the translations are vague. It clearly did not get a good proofreading. It went out of print after a few months and will be replaced by a revised translation. I see the new one on Amazon listed as unavailable (March 10, 2008) but it will probably be a live listing before long.
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