The Team - Osteopaths

Nicholas Handoll,D.O., M.S.C.C.

Nicholas Handoll qualified at the British School of Osteopathy, London, in 1971. He is a a regional osteopathic careers co-ordinator for the British School of Osteopathy.
He attended the first cranial course ever held in this country in 1972. He established the practice in Hereford in 1975 and in Ross-on-Wye soon after. He was a member of the Editorial Board of the British Osteopathic Journal for six years.

Books written include Osteopathy:Your Questions Answered (1983), Osteopathy in Br itain (1986) and Anatomy of Potency (2000), an examination of quantum physics and how it can help us to understand who we are and the environment in which we live.  Anatomy of Potency has since been translated into German, French and Italian.

His articles and papers have been published in various journals, including The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Journal of the Health Visitors Association.

The Osteopathic Management of Children with Down's Syndrome was published in the British Osteopathic Journal in 1988, and his paper on Energy Medicine was published in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine in 2004.

Nicholas Handoll has taught for over 20 years to both under-graduate and post-graduate osteopaths, in England and overseas. He has taught at the British School of Osteopathy, the European School of Osteopathy and the British College of Osteopathic Medicine and he has designed and directed a number of advanced courses.

In 1993 he co-founded the Sutherland Cranial College the independent post-graduate educational institution for teaching the cranial concept to fully qualified osteopaths. He still teaches on College courses and has been instrumental in the development of the teaching of the cranial concept in this country.

INicholas lectures regularly osteopathic groups, to doctors, dentists and osteopathic associations both within the UK and internationally.

He still enjoys caring for his patients in Hereford and Ross-on-Wye.

 

Brian McKenna, BSc (Hons) Ost
 

Brian McKenna, BSc (Hons) Ost  is a graduate of the British School of Osteopathy and is fully registered with the General Osteopathic Council.

 

He was the Welsh representative on the General Osteopathic Council from 2002 until 2006 and was re-appointed in April 2009. He is a committee member of the South Wales Osteopathic Society and also sits on the Sutherland Cranial College research subcommittee. He is a regional osteopathic co-ordinator for the British School of Osteopathy.

 

He is pursuing the post-graduate course in cranial osteopathy with the Sutherland Cranial College and has completed most components, including paediatrics.  He has also completed post graduate training in dry needling ‘acupuncture’ and is a member of the British Medical Acupuncture Society, through which he continues his studies in acupuncture.

 

He has written for both osteopathic and nursing professional journals and lectured on many subjects, including osteopathy, the treatment of children, infantile colic and clinical audit.

 

His main interests are in the fields of research, shoulder dysfunction and paediatrics.

 

Carol Bond,BSc (Hons) Ost

Carol Bond trained at the European School of Osteopathy, which affords a thorough grounding in a wide range of osteopathic techniques. She has also been actively involved with the John Wernham School of Classical Osteopathy, so her approach encompasses a breadth of osteopathic opinions, whilst being true to the fundamental principles of osteopathic thinking. She is particularly interested in myofascial work and indirect, functional techniques, including cranial osteopathy. A firm believer in life-long learning, Carol joined the team with Nicholas Handoll to develop her skills in cranial osteopathy while undertaking postgraduate study with the Sutherland Cranial College. Earlier experience in children’s and maternity clinics led to Carol’s great interest in osteopathy’s role during pregnancy and during a child’s early years.

Having taught Hatha Yoga for more than a decade and as one of the Yoga Biomedical Trust’s first yoga therapists in the UK, Carol enjoys exploring exercise in both maintaining health and specific rehabilitation. She enjoys practicing yoga herself and is considering opening a Hatha Yoga class locally. She also enjoys dancing and going for long walks in the beautiful Herefordshire countryside.