Family Chiropractic Center

Family Chiropractic Center Family Chiropractic Center is a professional chiropractic clinic in Coral Springs, FL. We have been Dr. Andrew Charni, D.C.

and Family Chiropractic Center provide professional chiropractic services to the Coral Springs area and surrounding communities. Service offerings focus on providing relief from acute and chronic pain, increased mobility and function, as well as long-term wellness care to individuals and families of all ages.

We just received another great review on Google:
12/23/2025

We just received another great review on Google:

This story is about the miracles of breast feeding.  The details will amaze you.
12/17/2025

This story is about the miracles of breast feeding. The details will amaze you.

She thought she was studying milk.
What she found was a conversation.

In 2008, Katie Hinde was standing in a primate research lab in California, staring at data that refused to behave.

She was analyzing breast milk from rhesus macaque mothers—hundreds of samples, thousands of measurements. And a pattern kept appearing that made no sense under the old rules of science.

Mothers with sons produced milk richer in fat and protein.
Mothers with daughters produced more volume, with different nutrient ratios.

This wasn’t random.

It was customized.

Her male colleagues waved it off.
Measurement error.
Noise.
Coincidence.

But Katie trusted the numbers.

And the numbers were saying something radical:

Milk isn’t just food.
It’s information.

For decades, science treated breast milk like gasoline—calories in, growth out. Simple fuel. But if that were true, why would it change based on a baby’s s*x?

Katie kept digging.

She analyzed milk from 250+ mothers across 700+ sampling events. And the story deepened.

First-time, younger mothers produced milk with fewer calories—but much higher cortisol, the stress hormone. Babies who drank it grew faster… and became more vigilant, more anxious, less confident.

The milk wasn’t just building bodies.

It was shaping temperament.

Then came the discovery that stunned even skeptics.

When a baby nurses, tiny amounts of saliva travel backward through the ni**le into the mother’s breast tissue. That saliva carries signals about the baby’s immune status.

If the baby is getting sick, the mother’s body detects it.

Within hours, her milk changes.

White blood cells surge.
Macrophages multiply.
Targeted antibodies appear.

And when the baby recovers?

The milk returns to baseline.

It wasn’t coincidence.

It was call and response.

The baby’s spit tells the mother what’s wrong.
The mother’s body makes exactly the medicine needed.

A biological dialogue—ancient, precise, invisible to science for centuries.

In 2011, Katie joined Harvard and looked at the wider research landscape.

What she found was unsettling.

There were twice as many studies on erectile dysfunction as on breast milk composition.

The first food every human ever consumed—the substance that shaped our species—had been largely ignored.

So Katie did something bold.

She started a blog with a deliberately provocative name:
“Mammals Suck… Milk!”

Within a year, it had over a million readers. Parents. Doctors. Scientists. People asking questions research had skipped.

And the discoveries kept coming:

• Milk changes by time of day (fat peaks mid-morning)
• Foremilk differs from hindmilk (nursing longer delivers richer milk)
• Human milk contains 200+ oligosaccharides babies can’t digest—because they exist to feed beneficial gut bacteria
• Every mother’s milk is as unique as a fingerprint

In 2017, Katie brought the story to a TED stage, watched by millions.
In 2020, she explained it to the world in Netflix’s Babies.

Today, at Arizona State University’s Comparative Lactation Lab, Dr. Katie Hinde continues uncovering how milk shapes human development from the very first hours of life—informing NICU care, improving formula design, and reshaping public health policy worldwide.

The implications are staggering.

Milk has been evolving for 200 million years—longer than dinosaurs walked the Earth.

What science dismissed as “simple nutrition” is actually one of the most sophisticated communication systems biology has ever produced.

Katie Hinde didn’t just study milk.

She revealed that the most ancient form of nourishment is also the most intelligent—
a living, responsive conversation between two bodies, shaping who we become before we ever speak.

All because one scientist refused to accept that half the story was “measurement error.”

Sometimes the biggest revolutions begin by listening to what everyone else ignores.

12/10/2025

In 1960, a miracle drug was sweeping the world. Thalidomide—safe, modern, perfect for morning sickness. Approved in over twenty countries. Millions of pills sold. The American pharmaceutical company Richardson-Merrell had already stocked warehouses with ten million tablets, ready to flood U.S. markets.
The FDA approval was supposed to be a formality.
Then it landed on the desk of Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey. She'd been at the FDA exactly one month. She was one of only seven doctors reviewing drugs for the entire agency. This was her first assignment. Her supervisors expected her to sign off quickly.
She didn't.
The testing data had gaps. The safety claims for pregnant women didn't match the evidence. Animal studies were weak. Human trials incomplete. The "scientific studies" were actually marketing materials. She had questions.
The company expected approval before Christmas. They pushed back. Hard.
Sales reps crowded her office. Phone calls day and night. Over eighteen months, company officials contacted her and her supervisors fifty separate times. They went over her head. They called her names she later said "you wouldn't print."
Every sixty days, the law required her to either approve the drug or request more information. Every sixty days, she found the new data inadequate. Every sixty days, she refused to sign.
Why was this junior medical officer holding up a wonder drug over technicalities?
Because years earlier, as a researcher at the University of Chicago, she'd studied how drugs cross the placental barrier to affect developing embryos. When she saw claims about thalidomide's safety in pregnancy, she wondered: had anyone tested what happens when it reaches a developing fetus?
Nobody had.
Then Europe started noticing something horrifying.
Babies born with arms and legs grotesquely shortened or missing entirely. Hands sprouting directly from shoulders like flippers. Eyes, ears, hearts malformed. At first, scattered cases. Then impossible to ignore.
All the mothers had taken thalidomide during days 20-36 of pregnancy—the exact window when limbs form.
More than 10,000 children affected across forty-six countries. About half died shortly after birth. Survivors faced lifetimes of profound disability. Germany pulled the drug in November 1961. Britain in December. But the damage was done.
In America? Seventeen confirmed cases.
Not seventeen thousand. Seventeen.
Because one woman refused to accept insufficient evidence.
When the news broke in mid-1962, Americans realized what had been avoided. The Washington Post ran a front-page story calling Kelsey a heroine who prevented "the birth of hundreds or indeed thousands of armless and legless children."
On August 7, 1962, President Kennedy gave her the highest civilian honor the U.S. can bestow. She was only the second woman ever to receive it.
But the story didn't end with an award.
Congress unanimously passed sweeping drug reform in October 1962. For the first time, companies had to prove drugs not only were safe but actually worked. They had to report adverse reactions. Obtain informed consent for trials. Testing standards became rigorous. Oversight became strong.
Frances Kelsey helped write those regulations. She headed the division implementing them. Her team earned the nickname "Kelsey's cops" for their rigorous oversight. She worked forty-five years at the FDA, retiring in 2005 at age ninety.
She died peacefully in 2015 at 101 years old—exactly fifty-three years after receiving Kennedy's medal.
She never made a groundbreaking discovery. Never invented a lifesaving device. Never developed a cure.
She just refused to accept inadequate evidence. She asked questions when everyone wanted quick approval. She demanded proof when proof didn't exist. She withstood pressure from powerful corporations and held firm.
Her decision saved thousands of American families from devastating heartbreak. Her example shaped modern medicine. Her legacy protects every person who takes prescription drugs today.
All because one doctor understood that courage isn't always about saying yes.
Sometimes the most important word in medicine is no.

Fevers can be good. Here’s the facts. Don’t reach for meds when a fever starts. Fever is pyrogenic. It kills pathogens.
12/10/2025

Fevers can be good. Here’s the facts. Don’t reach for meds when a fever starts. Fever is pyrogenic. It kills pathogens.

Think about the health choices you are making for yourself and your children. Ask questions and research before submitti...
12/09/2025

Think about the health choices you are making for yourself and your children. Ask questions and research before submitting to any procedure. Realize that some physicians are given financial incentives to fully vax. Through the “Sunshine Act”, you can determine the financial incentives your doctor is receiving.

https://hospital.uillinois.edu/patients-and-visitors/patient-information/personal-health-care-resources/sunshine-act-and-open-payments-system

https://reformpharmanow.substack.com/p/doctors-cash-hidden-profits-vaccines

We just received another great review on Facebook:
11/19/2025

We just received another great review on Facebook:

Address

10167 NW 31st Street, Suite 100
Coral Springs, FL
33065

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6:30pm
Tuesday 9am - 1pm
Wednesday 9am - 6:30pm
Friday 9am - 6:30pm
Saturday 8am - 10:30am

Telephone

+19543419988

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