Parker County Today PCT March 2019 | Page 81

Dr. Catherine Oseni: Continued from page 54 Fellow in Anti-Aging and with the American Board of Anti- Aging Health Practitioners. She is also board-certified with the Integrative and Functional Medicine Practitioner, Director of Integrative Medicine. She also helped to devel- op the integrative cancer therapy program at The Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders. She studied at the Nova Southeastern University College of Pharmacy and earned her Doctor of Pharmacy in 2006. After that, she worked in retail pharmacy, but advanced into practice as a commu- nity pharmacist. Later, she became a pediatric clinical pharmacist with the Children’s Healthcare System of Atlanta, working later at the Kindred Hospital in Fort Worth. In 2010, she began offering consulta- tions, acquiring her compounding pharmacist certification in 2012. She became a member of the Professional Compounding Centers of America, and offers an Executive Wellness Program. If she could wave a magic wand and help her patients instantly, she would create a miracle herb or supplement that cured all diseases and would heal the universe. She loves seeing her patients succeed. Her proudest moments are, “Seeing patients heal [by] changing their diets and lifestyles after several attempts when other conventional options have failed.” Dr. Catherine offers speaking engagements, live workshops, and seminars to educate the community about integrative and functional medicine. Even with her educating the public, Dr. Catherine still finds her biggest challenge to allow integration of health and wellness into western medicine by medical providers who are not yet familiar with this practice due to it being an emerging field. Hopefully in the next 10 years she will see more integration of conven- tional medicine with functional medi- cine for improved patient outcome. When she’s not healing her patients with the right supplements and nutrition, she’s spending time with her three children and her husband/muse, Dr. Olusegun Oseni.  Dr. Luke Haynes: Continued from page 56 “[We] bought seven new pieces of weight stacks equipment,” Ashtyn said. “Our goal with the addition of the gym quality equipment is to promote a more active lifestyle for those that have been less active either due to injury or for other reasons. We welcome patients to continue their exercise program in-house, but in our gym, our goal is to have them engage in an exercise-based program wherever is convenient for them. For some, our location is more conve- nient, and for some that live further out, another facility may be more advantageous. If we can set in place the ideology of an active lifestyle and change that behavior, then our goal has been achieved.”  Besides the new gym equipment, Dr. Haynes brought on a new physi- cal therapist to provide more treat- ment for their customers. If you’re wanting to come and check out the new addition, Haynes Physical Therapy is scheduled to hold a ribbon cutting on April 2 with the Weatherford Chamber of Commerce. and began his clinical practice in Weatherford. In 1997, he opened his own practice providing contract services to different physical therapy providers. In 2000, he opened his first private-practice outpatient physi- cal therapy clinic in North Richland Hills, relocating to the medical district in the Mid-Cities, and then relocating again to Weatherford in 2003. He went back to school and finished his doctoral studies through the Massachusetts General Hospital Institute of Health Professions in 2012 to provide his clients cutting- edge therapy. Dr. Haynes’ practice is centered on multiple ideologies in physical therapy, most notably with the International Academy of Orthopedic Medicine, the Academy of Orthopedic Medicine, the American Academy of Manipulative Therapy, and KinetaCore Functional Dry Needling.  Growing by leaps and bounds, Dr. Haynes just recently added 1,800 square feet, allowing him to have a full gym to promote a more active lifestyle for his patients.  my patients to let us use a multi- tude of non-medicinal, non-surgical approaches to manage pain and to restore normal functional movement and activities.”  So what is dry needling?  “[We] use a small mono filament needle and we find trigger points in the affected area,” Ashtyn Haynes (Dr. Luke’s partner in the business as well as in life) said. “If it’s for the back, he [the doctor] will look at all the different muscles around the pain and find the trigger point that is caus- ing the pain and insert the needle to find the trigger point. The goal is that once you hit the trigger point [it] helps release the muscle spasms and decrease the pain.” “Dry needling is the biggest portion of our practice to use it a lot as a pain control. We’ve added Haynes PT clinical seminars. He’s teaching other therapists how to perform the dry needling,” she continued. Dr. Haynes graduated from Texas Tech University Health Science Center in 1994 with a BsPT 79