CIM
Al-Ahliyya Amman University
Training and Consulting Department
CIM
The Leading International College
Of Integrative Medicine

Register Now! Please, fill in your personal details and we will contact you shortly

Osteopathy

20 Days
Language of Delivery: Arabic/English - According to the student's choice
Delivery: Face to Face/Zoom - According to the student's choice

Audience

This study program is intended for all horse and animal lovers, for riders, for horse owners, for veterinarians, for stable workers, and for those working in all equine therapeutic fields. With the aim of treating and caring for your horse, or the horses under your responsibility, and also to acquire new effective therapeutic tools, develop your profession, stand out from other practitioners and acquire professions that are in great demand in the labor market, with international certificates from the leading institutions in the field and for the first time in the country.

About the program

The course in equine osteopathy will teach you how to assess, osteopathically diagnose and treat musculoskeletal conditions in horses and ponies.

The main osteopathic approach is based on ‘classical’ osteopathy and is fundamentally a structural approach to manipulation involving ‘long lever’ rather than ‘short lever’ manipulation. The techniques involve joint and muscle mobilisation and articulation. This is a tried and tested method for treating musculoskeletal problems in horses.

The classes will involve revision of the anatomy relevant to the structural techniques to be learned.

The main theme of teaching the early techniques will involve:

1) learning/revising the anatomy.

2) Palpating the anatomical structures.

3) articulating the tissues palpated.

We try to instil the idea of ‘Osteopathic intention’, which involves visualising the tissues being palpated and treated. This method ensures an osteopathic input that generates healing and healing energy.

Other essential and necessary subjects will include visual assessment and lameness, equine behaviour and psychology, handling and control of horses and patterns of somatic dysfunction and biomechanics and vertebral manipulation.

The visual assessment at walk and trot gives the osteopath an opportunity to assess the quality of movement and detect lameness. It also helps formulate an early indication of where to begin the structural assessment or target treatment.

Equine psychology and behaviour are essential for a practitioner to remain safe when assessing or treating horses. It also enables the osteopath to apply structural osteopathic techniques effectively and safely.

Learning the patterns of dysfunction, (osteopathic lesions, somatic dysfunction, pathophysiology) in horses explains why horses behave the way they do whilst being handled or ridden. It gives the practitioner a means of explaining to the rider or owner why their horse finds it difficult or impossible to perform certain actions.

This pathophysiology causes some predictable patterns in the horse so learning how to detect these patterns shows the osteopath how to approach and resolve those issues with manipulation.

To properly understand how the patterns of dysfunction affect the horse, a sound knowledge of equine biomechanics is required.

The process of applying osteopathic articulation and joint mobilisation involves learning how to assess and treat every joint in the horse’s body.

We begin with the distal forelimb, starting with the most distal articulations in the foot, and work carefully up the limb to the shoulder, using the anatomy and palpation prior to joint articulation. This involves mobilising both bony and soft tissue, treating muscles, ligaments, tendons, and joints.

The next stage involves the same approach to the hind limb. It is just as important to be able to safely assess and treat the back leg from the most distal tissues up to the hip and pelvis.

The osteopathic approach to the cervical spine is covered next. Each vertebral level in the neck can be palpated, assessed, and treated with joint articulation and manipulation.

The structural approach includes treatment to the thoracic and lumbar spine.

Once the fundamental classical approach to treatment of the horse has been covered, you will learn how to apply direct manipulation.

The techniques include manipulation to the upper cervical spine, side bending adjustment to the Occiput/Atlas (C0/C1), Atlas /Axis in rotation (C1/C2), mid to lower neck (C5), manipulation to the hip, and the Lumbar spine in rotation or side bending. There are also techniques for manipulation to the distal limb (pedal bone/short pastern P2/P3,) and to the shoulder involving decompression to the gleno/humeral joint.

The course will finish with student clinics whereby you will assess and treat a range of horses.

Certificates

(Diploma) Certificate from Al-Ahliyya Amman University – the Training and Consulting Department, the International College of Integrative Medicine (CIM), Dubai Racing Club, Dubai Equestrian Club and the International Organization for Complementary Medicine (CMA) located in London, UK, which qualifies the graduates to work all over the world.

Syllabus
Syllabus

Register & Pay

Registration Cost 300$

Jordan

Al-Ahliyya Amman University