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The foundations of osteopathy

Andrew Taylor Still
& the birth of osteopathy

A Civil War surgeon who lost three children to meningitis, Still refused to accept that medicine had no better answers. What he developed in 1874 changed healthcare forever.

Founded 1874 · Kirksville, Missouri
Andrew Taylor Still, founder of osteopathy
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"The object of the physician is to find health. Anyone can find disease."

Andrew Taylor Still · Founder of Osteopathy · 1828–1917

The man behind the medicine

Who was Andrew Taylor Still?

Andrew Taylor Still was born in 1828 in Virginia, the son of a Methodist minister and physician. He grew up learning medicine from his father, eventually serving as a surgeon during the American Civil War, an experience that exposed him to the brutal limitations of medicine at the time.

The defining moment of his life came in 1864, when three of his children died from spinal meningitis despite receiving the best medical care available. Devastated and disillusioned, Still began to question the foundations of conventional medicine, including the widespread use of drugs he believed often caused more harm than good.

On 22 June 1874, he formally announced the discovery of osteopathy, a philosophy of medicine built on the idea that the body has an innate capacity to heal itself when its structure is functioning correctly.

1828

Born in Lee County, Virginia

Son of a frontier physician and minister, exposed to medicine from an early age.

1861–1865

Civil War surgeon

Witnessed the devastation of battlefield medicine and grew increasingly critical of prevailing treatments.

1864

Personal tragedy

Three children died from spinal meningitis, the catalyst for his radical rethinking of medicine.

1874

Osteopathy founded

Still formally announced his new system of medicine, rooted in the relationship between structure and function.

1892

First school of osteopathy

The American School of Osteopathy opened in Kirksville, Missouri, the world's first osteopathic institution.

1917

Legacy secured

Still died having established osteopathy as a recognised healthcare profession practised worldwide.

The philosophy

The four principles of osteopathy

Still's original philosophy can be distilled into four core principles that remain the foundation of osteopathic practice to this day, in Blackpool, across the UK, and around the world.

01

The body is a unit

The person is a complete, integrated unit of body, mind and spirit. No single part can be treated in isolation, everything is connected. A problem in the lower back may be influenced by posture, breathing, stress or movement patterns elsewhere in the body.

02

Structure and function are interrelated

The structure of the body, its bones, muscles, joints, connective tissue, directly influences how it functions. When structure is compromised, function is affected. Restoring optimal structure supports the body's ability to work as it should.

03

The body has self-healing capacity

The body possesses its own self-regulating and self-healing mechanisms. The role of the osteopath is not to fix or cure, but to remove the barriers that are preventing the body from doing what it is designed to do.

04

Rational treatment is based on these principles

Treatment must acknowledge all three principles above. Care is not applied as a generic protocol but as a thoughtful, individualised response to the unique circumstances of each patient, their history, their body, their life.

For healthcare professionals

What does the evidence say?

Osteopathy has moved well beyond its 19th century origins. Today's practice is grounded in contemporary musculoskeletal science, neurophysiology and evidence-based clinical reasoning. Each card below links directly to the relevant evidence.

NICE Guidelines

Recommended for low back pain

NICE guidelines (NG59) recommend manual therapy, including osteopathic treatment, as part of a package of care for low back pain, alongside exercise and psychological support where appropriate.

Neurophysiology

Pain modulation mechanisms

Manual therapy techniques used in osteopathy have been shown to activate descending pain inhibition pathways, reduce central sensitisation and modulate nociceptive processing, effects that extend well beyond the purely mechanical.

Systematic Reviews

Evidence for musculoskeletal conditions

Systematic reviews support osteopathic manipulative treatment for low back pain, neck pain and musculoskeletal conditions. The Cochrane Library holds several relevant reviews on manual therapy effectiveness.

Regulation & Standards

Statutory regulation in the UK

Osteopathy is statutorily regulated in the UK under the Osteopaths Act 1993. All practising osteopaths must be registered with the General Osteopathic Council and meet ongoing CPD requirements.

Referring to our clinic

We welcome referrals from GPs, physiotherapists and other healthcare professionals. Our osteopaths provide:

  • Comprehensive musculoskeletal assessment and diagnosis
  • Evidence-informed, hands-on treatment
  • Written reports available on request
  • Collaborative approach, working alongside your care plan
  • Appropriate onward referral where indicated
  • GOsC-registered practitioners, fully insured
  • No waiting list, often seen within the same week

Get in touch directly

For referral queries, clinical questions or to discuss a patient, contact David or Reece directly.

Conditions commonly referred

Osteopathy is appropriate for a wide range of musculoskeletal presentations:

  • Low back pain, acute, chronic and recurrent
  • Cervicogenic headache and neck pain
  • Sciatica and nerve-related leg pain
  • Shoulder, elbow and upper limb conditions
  • Hip, knee and lower limb pain
  • Sports and occupational injuries
  • Musculoskeletal pain in pregnancy
  • Fibromyalgia and persistent pain syndromes
  • Post-surgical rehabilitation support
  • Arthritic pain and joint stiffness

Osteopathy in 2026

From 1874 to Blackpool

Still's founding principles remain remarkably relevant. Modern osteopathy has evolved to incorporate contemporary understanding of pain science, neurophysiology and evidence-based practice, while retaining its founding commitment to treating the whole person.

In the UK, osteopathy is one of a small number of complementary healthcare professions to hold statutory regulation, meaning patients can be confident that their osteopath has met rigorous education, clinical and ethical standards.

At Osteopath Blackpool, we are proud to carry Still's founding philosophy forward, combining his whole-body approach with modern, evidence-informed practice to help patients across the Fylde Coast live pain-free, active lives.

Osteopathy by numbers

150+

Years of osteopathic practice

5,500+

Registered osteopaths in the UK

30,000

Patient consultations per week in UK

1993

Year of statutory regulation in UK

Experience osteopathy for yourself

Over 150 years of evolution. One founding principle remains, your body has the capacity to feel better.