incorporate a little bit of science. It may be overkill in some cases, but that's okay. I'd rather be overkill than not have anything there in my opinion. Then again, I'm a researcher, so that's what I do. We appreciate it. I want to just, as we're coming to a close, share a couple of things. You mentioned table talk. I think it is so important that the doctors hear you with that because ... Just yesterday I had a doctor call me up and he needed some advice, which is what we do all day long. When I was speaking to him, it turns out that this patient had come in to him for two months and the patient had some upper back and lower neck issues, and that's what provoked them to show up in the office in the first place. The patient had already gotten a progress examination. Everything was showing improvement all the way around, but the patient had also gone to their orthopedist. The orthopedist, what they do is surgery, so it was an orthopedic surgeon. He sent the patient for an MRI. The patient went back to the orthopedist, the orthopedist did recommend surgery and said that if you move your neck the wrong way, the wrong time, it could be curtains and you should never let a chiropractor adjust a neck like this with a disk like this on the MRI. I said to the doctor, "If you had talked to the patient as you were taking care of them, they would have already known better. Let me tell you this: when you're going to ..." Because the patient came back with the MRI and said, "What are you going to do for me?" He wanted his money back for two months of care. I said, "Hell no!" I said, "He should go for a second opinion because he went to someone that sells surgery who's now selling it to him with fear. When the second opinion comes back, if it's any different, I want to know are you going to ask that orthopedist for your money back just because you got a different opinion. You not have a different opinion from what we recommended and what we actually did that worked, so why would you go to the doctor that's selling you surgery to buy surgery when you've already done well with the care you've had here and you want your money back here? Makes no sense." It just goes to prove your point, Dean, that table talk is so important because if he would have educated that patient a little bit more thorough along the way, he would've been prepared when he went to the medical doctor with the right questions. "If it's that bad and that's dangerous, how come I'm doing better with that? Why would I go under a knife that is so risky and you can't take back?" These are things that can all be resolved through proper education and by offering up some information as you presented today. I just want you to know we appreciate all that you do and I'm so thankful that you participated in our show because this research is important to all of us. At ChiroSecure, we're dedicating ourselves to make sure that if a patient alleges that a chiropractic adjustment causes mercurial dissection, the most aggressive defense available based on research with be asserted. That's a different research, it's just one that is more direct relationship to what we do with our doctors. This is a huge commitment on both ChiroSecure's part from a financial point of view, but also a
Dr. Hoffman:
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