Specialist Yuliya Asovskaja


I always knew I would become a medical professional. Coming from a family of neurologist-psychiatrists, I spent a lot of time in hospitals and clinics since childhood – not as a patient. Therefore, from adolescence, I couldn’t imagine myself doing any other job.

I am particularly interested in people, their mindset, and communication. My calling is to understand people. My goal is to establish a connection with the individual, discover the psychological aspect of illness, provide patients with information to help them heal, and observe this process.

Why am I so interested in psychology? When I entered medical school, I thought I would become a psychotherapist. However, when the time came, I chose family medicine. At the last moment, I was inspired by the idea of Professor Valius that family medicine looks at the person as a whole. Besides family medicine, I also studied osteopathy, which helps understand the connection between various diseases and the internal structure of the body (for example, a misaligned spine compresses internal organs, the diaphragm cannot function smoothly, leading to digestive issues, etc.).

Everything in life is interconnected, and nothing happens by chance. Thus, through osteopathy, I discovered endobiogeny. It is natural that endobiogeny became the next step in my journey since it involves combining the whole. Endobiogeny affirmed my belief that diseases come from within and that by sitting incorrectly, sleeping incorrectly, or ignoring the body’s signals, we invite ailments. But it also showed that by helping the body recover, it can heal itself.

My favorite medical discipline is prevention. It helps not only solve the problem but also anticipate it, catch it off guard, and perhaps never acquire it at all. In this way, endobiogeny conditionally looks both into the past and into the future.

Now, endobiogeny is simply a part of my life. It taught me to look at my body’s reactions healthily, not to be upset about its shortcomings, but to understand that you live with what you have and must make friends with yourself. I will never recommend something to a patient that I wouldn’t do myself.



Education:

  • 2019: Continuing Education in Endobiogeny. Organizer: Endobiogeny Institute. Lecturer: Dr. Ch. Abi Chahine, President of the Belgian Endobiogeny Association.
  • 2015-2017: Continuing Education in Endobiogeny Organizer: Endobiogeny Institute Lecturers: Dr. K. Hedayat, President of the U.S. Endobiogeny Association, Dr. J. C. Lapraz, Founder of Endobiogeny, Dr. Miguel Garcia Poujol (Mexico), and others.
  • 2011-2014: Family Doctor Residency, Vilnius University.
  • 2013: Osteopathy Techniques in Biological Balancing Format, Dr. Chikurov School, Kiev.
  • 2005-2011: Completed Master’s in Medicine, Lithuanian University of Health Sciences.

Work experience:

  • Since 2019, I have been a lecturer for the Endobiogeny training programs organized by the Endobiogeny Institute.
  • Since 2018, I have been consulting at the “Endobiogeny” clinic.
  • From 2017 to 2018, I worked as a family doctor at the City Medical Center.
  • From 2014 to 2016, I worked as a family doctor at the Central Polyclinic.
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