Book an Appointment
Welcome to Spencer Jean, DO & Associates’ Online Scheduling and Electronic Health Records System.
Booking can be done online HERE or you can call as during our clinical hours at 519-900-5131. If you do not see an available appointment time that works with your schedule, please call us and we will do our best to accommodate.
NEW PATIENTS
- Please select the “Initial Assessment” option, under your preferred practitioner and discipline.
- Once booking your initial visit, you will receive paperwork electronically to the email you have provided. We ask that you please complete this to the best of your ability before you arrive for your appointment time. If you do not use email, or do not receive this email, please give our clinic a call and we will ensure to have a physical copy of this paperwork ready for you upon your arrival. We ask that you arrive 15 minutes before your scheduled appointment time if this applies to you.
EXISTING PATIENTS
- If you are an existing patient, please read the TREATMENT DESCRIPTIONS carefully and select the most appropriate treatment option based on your prescribed treatment plan.
- If you are seeking an appointment for a NEW CHIEF COMPLAINT OR NEW INJURY and/or have not been into the clinic for SIX (6) OR MORE months, please select “RE-ASSESSMENT”.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- If you are having difficulties navigating, creating an account, or scheduling on this platform, please contact us at 519-900-5131 or info@spencerjeando.com
- HOW TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT ONLINE INSTRUCTIONAL VIDEO
- LATE CANCELLATION/ MISSED APPOINTMENT POLICY:
- If you have a Promotional Code, please enter it in the section Reason For Visit after booking your appointment. Our staff will apply the code to your account prior to your appointment.
Welcome to our online booking site
Osteopathy
OSTEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY
Osteopathy embraces the philosophy that the body has an innate or natural ability to self-regulate and to heal itself. The key factor that permits this process to proceed unimpeded is the ability of the body to circulate all of its fluids and liquids. These fluids include the blood, lymph, synovial fluid, digestive juices, cerebrospinal fluid, axoplasm, and all the other intra and extracellular fluids of the body.
These liquids carry many of the body’s life-sustaining compounds, such as hormones, enzymes and their secretions, immune and anti-inflammatory factors, neural impulses, nutritional elements, and dissolved gases such as oxygen. These fluids are involved in all aspects of life, from the DNA that is suspended within the intracellular fluids, to the fetus which floats in the amniotic fluid. In addition these body fluids serve as mediums for excreting all the bi-products of digestion and cellular respiration.
Any obstruction that impedes the circulation of fluids within the body is the focus of osteopathic assessment and treatment. These impediments may take the form of structural or non-structural blockages. Structural or physical impediments include generalized twists, curves or pulls within the body as well as specific bones, organs or tissues that are misaligned. These faults may either affect the control of a system that controls fluid circulation, or affect the circulation of liquids along with the life sustaining and regulatory products that they carry.
Non-structural impediments may include emotional patterns that are responsible for maintaining the body in a certain adaptation of defence, such as a predisposition to holding the breath. These adaptations are quite often responses to stressful incidents of the past, present, or are of a repetitive nature, such as raising the shoulders in times of stress or cold temperatures.
Over time, the body gradually loses its ability to efficiently self-regulate and to self-heal. Some of this loss may be due to the aging process, the prolonged influence of gravity on posture, trauma, accident, illness, surgical scarring, childbirth, repetitive activity, or the cumulative effects of mental, emotional, physical and spiritual stress.
In most cases the patient has had some combination of the above experiences. The result of these experiences may manifest themselves locally in the body or more frequently, the symptoms are experienced far from the site of the original site of occurrence. For this reason, the Osteopathic Manual Practitioner is said to assess the whole body. Although treatment may be directed toward several specific areas, the effect of that treatment is often felt throughout the body. It is for this reason that the Osteopathic Manual Practitioner is also said to treat the whole body.
Where there is life, there is motion. Osteopathy appreciates the significance of even the smallest motion within all the tissues and cells of the body, and applies this understanding in it’s unique form of medical care. Simply put, when the body’s motion is in balance, a state of health exists. When this motion is disturbed, health is affected and a state of disease can arise.
Massage Therapy
The Massage Therapy Act, 1991, the provincial legislation for Massage Therapy in Ontario, defines the practice of Massage Therapy as “the assessment of the soft tissue and joints of the body and the treatment and prevention of physical dysfunction and pain of the soft tissue and joints by manipulation to develop, maintain, rehabilitate or augment physical function, or relieve pain.” This is referred to as the Scope of Practice.
Naturopathic Medicine
Naturopathic medicine has a unique approach to your health and blends modern scientific knowledge with traditional and natural forms of medicine, all-the-while being a partner to conventional medicine.
The goal is to:
- Explore the gentlest approaches to treatment for any given individual and
condition
- Address the root cause rather than symptoms management whenever possible
- Always minimize the risks of side effects
To do this, Naturopathic Doctors (NDs) focus on a personalized patient experience with a lot more time allotted to meeting the individual, listening, researching and understanding. Naturopathic medicine relies heavily on lifestyle and nutritional medicine, but it also uses herbs, supplements, acupuncture and sometimes more medically inclined approaches like injections, intravenous therapies and even some prescribing. When you work with a naturopathic doctor, you will notice that blood work and testing is often key. Naturopathic medicine can be used in conjunction with conventional medical therapies to support the body’s healing processes—an approach referred to as “integrative medicine.” In some clinics and hospitals, NDs work in collaboration with MDs, nurses, DCs, DOs, acupuncturists, and other healthcare practitioners, and they refer patients for emergencies and other situations when necessary.
Select a treatment
from the list on the left
to view available appointment times
Need Help? 1-519-900-5131 info@spencerjeando.com