Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
My ICL     Sign In
Thursday, March 28, 2024
Index to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic Literature
Share:


For best results switch to Advanced Search.
Article Detail
Return to Search Results
ID 22980
  Title David S. Walther, DC, DIBAK: Scholar, researcher, politician and teacher
URL
Journal Chiropr Hist. 2013 Summer;33(1):10-27
Author(s)
Subject(s)
Peer Review Yes
Publication Type Article
Abstract/Notes

Dr. David S. Walther was the product of a straight chiropractic family and education, and made his mark as a teacher and encyclopedist of the broad-scope chiropractic method called applied kinesiology (AK). David was politically influential in uniting the Colorado Chiropractic Society and the Colorado Chiropractic Association (one straight and the other mixer) into a single organization, as he was the only person that both organizations would agree upon as their new president in the early 1970s. David subsequently created six textbooks and four chapters for other textbooks spanning numerous disciplines, including AK and dentistry and AK and complementary and alternative medicine, as well as educational materials about AK for the general public. These textbooks have been translated into Italian, Japanese, Korean, French, and German, and a Chinese translation of his Applied Kinesiology: Synopsis is underway. David also produced over sixty patient-education pamphlets covering separate clinical subjects that have been sold to clinicians for several decades. David is cited as the primary reference in hundreds of peer-reviewed articles on AK. His career provides a model for the chiropractic scholar and clinician-scientist today.

This abstract is reproduced with the permission of the publisher. Full text is available by subscription.


 

   Text (Citation) Tagged (Export) Excel
 
Email To
Subject
 Message
Format
HTML Text     Excel



To use this feature you must register a personal account in My ICL. Registration is free! In My ICL you can save your ICL searches in My Searches, and you can save search results in My Collections. Be sure to use the Held Citations feature to collect citations from an entire search session. Read more search tips.

Sign Into Existing My ICL Account    |    Register A New My ICL Account
Search Tips
  • Enclose phrases in "quotation marks".  Examples: "low back pain", "evidence-based"
  • Retrieve all forms of a word with an asterisk*, also called a wildcard or truncation.  Example: chiropract* retrieves chiropractic, chiropractor, chiropractors
  • Register an account in My ICL to save search histories (My Searches) and collections of records (My Collections)
Advanced Search Tips