Back Pain Care at ReliefNow Laser Akron

By: Dr. Andrew T. Pamer, DC | ReliefNow Laser Akron | Akron, Ohio

Back pain is the leading cause of disability worldwide and affects a large majority of adults at some point in their lives. For patients in Akron, Cuyahoga Falls, Barberton, Green, Stow, Hudson, Tallmadge, Fairlawn, and across Summit County, back pain is not only a physical burden. It also drives lost workdays, reduced productivity, and limitations on the active Northeast Ohio lifestyle that residents value. Common approaches such as rest, pain medication, and surgery address parts of the clinical picture, and conservative, non-surgical options are also part of the broader range of care. At ReliefNow Laser Akron, Class IV laser therapy and the Regenerative Medical Laser™ protocol are used as part of a care approach that works with the body’s own repair mechanisms.

Back pain presents along a spectrum from acute muscle strain to complex multilevel spinal degeneration. A common thread across many forms of back pain is inflammation, the body’s immune response to tissue damage, structural stress, or neurological irritation.

Dr. Andrew T. Pamer, DC, has built ReliefNow Laser Akron on a philosophy shaped by a lifetime in chiropractic: that the body has a meaningful capacity for healing when given the right support. His father’s practice in Mansfield, Ohio, and the patient-centered values he observed growing up inform an approach to back pain that focuses on the underlying drivers of a patient’s condition alongside symptom management.

How Does Back Pain Become Chronic?

Acute back pain triggers immediate local inflammation. Chronic back pain often involves central sensitization, a neurological process documented in the journal Pain in which the spinal cord and brain become increasingly reactive to pain signals over time. Once central sensitization is established, treating only the local tissue source is frequently not sufficient on its own.

Class IV laser therapy is studied for its effects on back pain through several pathways. At the tissue level, photobiomodulation has been examined in relation to pro-inflammatory cytokines, cellular repair, and local microcirculation. At the neural level, published research has examined laser therapy’s effects on C-fiber and A-delta pain fiber activity, the fiber types involved in chronic pain transmission. At ReliefNow Laser Akron, the protocol is applied as part of an individualized care plan following clinical evaluation.

What Is the Northeast Ohio Back Pain Context?

Summit County’s population carries occupational back pain patterns shaped by manufacturing, construction, and the trades, industries that account for a significant portion of the Akron metro workforce. The heavy lifting, sustained awkward postures, and cumulative loading of physical labor can contribute to the spinal conditions behind a large share of back pain presentations seen at ReliefNow Laser Akron. Ohio winters that limit outdoor activity can also reduce the movement that supports spinal health.

Practical Considerations for Back Pain

The evidence on bed rest for back pain is consistent: prolonged rest tends to worsen outcomes, and controlled, guided movement is generally preferred. Core stabilization targeting the transverse abdominis, multifidus, and pelvic floor is commonly described as an important long-term component of back pain management, typically introduced after the acute inflammatory phase has settled.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is back pain something I just have to live with?

A: Not necessarily. Many patients who receive appropriate, targeted conservative care experience meaningful functional improvement. Individual results vary, and each plan is based on a clinical evaluation.

Q: How do I know if my back pain needs imaging?

A: Most acute back pain does not require immediate imaging. Dr. Pamer uses clinical examination to identify red-flag findings that may indicate a need for X-ray or MRI.

Q: How does the ReliefNow approach differ from standard physical therapy?

A: The Class IV laser component is used to address the inflammatory and cellular environment in affected tissue, which is a different mechanism than exercise-based therapy. Combined with chiropractic assessment, the approach addresses back pain on more than one level as part of a comprehensive plan.

Addressing the Source of Back Pain

For patients across Akron, Cuyahoga Falls, Green, Barberton, and Summit County who have managed back pain with medications, injections, or repeated short-term therapy without lasting resolution, a comprehensive evaluation can be a useful first step toward a longer-term care plan.

Dr. Andrew T. Pamer, DC | Chiropractor | ReliefNow Laser Akron | 3485 Fortuna Dr, Suite 300, Akron OH 44312 | (330) 522-1321 | reliefnowlaser.com/providers/akron/

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any treatment program.

Why Every Author Needs a Website They Own, Not Just a Social Following

Many authors build their entire audience on social media: followers on one platform, engagement on another, and visibility wherever the algorithm happens to favor them. It feels like an audience, and in a sense it is. But it is an audience built on rented land. The platform owns the relationship, controls who sees what, and can change the rules, suppress reach, or suspend an account at any time, potentially erasing years of audience-building overnight through no fault of the author.

An author website is the answer to that fragility: the one platform a writer truly owns and controls. Lumera Publishing provides author website design for writers who want a durable home base beyond social media. A professional author website can showcase books, support author branding services, grow an author email list, and help drive long-term book visibility. This article explains the risks of relying entirely on social platforms, what it means to own your audience through a website and email list, and how a well-built website for authors can showcase books, capture readers, and support sales on the ground the author actually controls.

The Risk of Building on Rented Land

Building an audience solely on social media means building on infrastructure someone else owns and governs. The platform decides how many of an author’s followers actually see each post, and that reach can shrink dramatically with a single algorithm change. Accounts can be restricted or suspended, sometimes mistakenly, cutting an author off from the audience they spent years assembling. Even when nothing goes wrong, the author never truly has a direct line to their followers. Every message passes through the platform’s filters first.

This dependence puts an author in a precarious position. The audience may be large, but it is not secure, and it is not theirs in any meaningful sense. A change in policy, a shift in the algorithm, or a problem with an account can undo enormous effort instantly. Relying entirely on rented platforms means an author’s connection to their readers is always conditional, subject to decisions made by companies whose priorities are not the author’s. That fragility is the central weakness of a social-only presence.

A Home Base You Control

A website flips that dynamic entirely. It is a home base the author owns and controls, where the rules do not change without warning, and no third party stands between the author and their readers. The author decides what it contains, how it is organized, and how readers move through it. Nothing about it can be suppressed by an algorithm or removed by a platform’s decision. It is a permanent, owned presence that anchors everything else an author does online.

This permanence and control are what make a website fundamentally different from a social profile. Social platforms are useful for reaching people and building visibility, but they work best as channels that point back to something an author actually owns. The website is that something: the stable center of an author’s online presence. Lumera Publishing designs every mobile-friendly author website to serve as that reliable home base, giving writers a foundation that does not depend on the goodwill or stability of any outside platform.

The Power of an Owned Email List

The single most valuable thing a website enables is an owned email list: a direct line to readers that no platform controls. When a reader subscribes through an author’s site, the author can reach them whenever they choose, without an algorithm deciding whether the message gets through. Unlike social followers, email subscribers belong to the author in a real sense. The connection is direct, permanent, and unmediated, and it travels with the author regardless of what happens to any social platform.

This direct line is what turns a website from a static page into a genuine audience-building tool. A reader who follows an author on social media might never see their posts again after an algorithm shift. A reader on the author’s email list can be reached reliably for years. Lumera Publishing builds sites designed to capture those subscribers, helping authors convert visitors into a list they own: the most durable and valuable connection an author can have with their readers.

A Site That Showcases, Captures, and Sells

A well-built author website does real work rather than simply existing. It showcases an author’s books, presenting them attractively and giving readers a clear sense of what is available. It captures email subscribers, turning interested visitors into a list the author can reach directly. It also drives readers toward where they can actually buy, removing friction between discovery and purchase. Each of these functions strengthens an author’s ability to reach and convert readers on their own terms.

Lumera Publishing designs sites with these purposes built in, so the website actively supports an author’s goals rather than serving as a passive online business card. The aim is a site that continuously works for the author: introducing their books, growing their list, and channeling readers toward sales. Combined with book marketing services, an author’s website becomes a practical asset that supports visibility, credibility, and sales over time.

Built for Mobile and Search

For a website to do its job, it has to work where readers actually are, which means it must be mobile-friendly and visible in search. A large share of readers will encounter an author’s site on a phone, and a site that does not display well on mobile loses them immediately. Likewise, an SEO-friendly author website can be found by readers actively looking for the author or related books, bringing in new audiences rather than only serving existing ones.

Lumera Publishing builds author sites that are clean, mobile-friendly, and structured for search visibility, so they perform well for readers who visit and help new readers discover the author over time. This technical foundation matters because an owned platform is only valuable if it actually reaches people. A site that works smoothly on every device and can be found through search extends an author’s reach while keeping that reach firmly under the author’s control.

Owning Your Audience for the Long Run

Owning your audience changes an author’s footing entirely. Instead of hoping a platform surfaces their posts, an author with a website and email list can reach readers directly whenever there is news, a new release, or a reason to connect. The website becomes the durable center of an author’s presence: a foundation that does not disappear with an algorithm change and that the author fully controls, now and for every future book.

Lumera Publishing helps authors build that foundation through professional author website design, mobile-friendly development, SEO-friendly structure, list-building features, and author branding services that support long-term visibility. Authors who want a platform they control rather than one they merely borrow can contact Lumera Publishing to discuss building a website for authors designed to own their audience for the long run.

About Lumera Publishing

Lumera Publishing is a full-service, fee-based book publishing company based in New York, USA. The company offers ghostwriting, editing, formatting, cover design, publishing, author website design, and book marketing services for authors across all genres, helping writers self-publish professionally while retaining 100% of their rights and royalties.

Learn more at lumerapublishing.com or call +1 (888) 477-8199. Media contact: info@lumerapublishing.com.

Fox Agrees to Buy Roku in $22 Billion Acquisition Deal

Fox Roku acquisition plans moved forward Monday after Fox Corporation announced a definitive agreement to purchase Roku in a transaction valued at approximately $22 billion. The deal brings together one of the largest television and digital media companies in the United States with a streaming platform that reaches more than 100 million households through connected television devices, operating systems, and advertising services. The companies stated that the transaction will be completed through a combination of cash and Fox Class A common stock, subject to shareholder and regulatory approvals. 

The agreement marks the largest acquisition undertaken by Fox since the company was established following the restructuring of Rupert Murdoch’s media assets. Company executives described the transaction as a major expansion of Fox’s direct relationship with streaming audiences. Under the terms announced by the companies, Roku shareholders will receive a combination of cash and stock that values the company at approximately $160 per share. 

Fox stated that existing shareholders of the company are expected to own about 73% of the combined business after the transaction closes, while Roku shareholders will hold the remaining 27%. The companies expect the acquisition to close during the first half of 2027 if required approvals are secured.

Fox Expands Reach Through Roku Platform

The acquisition gives Fox direct access to Roku’s streaming ecosystem, which serves more than 100 million households globally. Roku operates one of the most widely used connected television platforms and also runs The Roku Channel, a free ad-supported streaming service available across multiple devices. 

Fox executives said the combination will connect the company’s portfolio of sports, news, and entertainment content with Roku’s distribution network and advertising technology. Fox currently owns broadcast television assets, cable news operations, sports media rights, and streaming services including Tubi and Fox One. The addition of Roku would significantly expand the company’s direct consumer footprint.

Lachlan Murdoch, executive chair and chief executive officer of Fox, described the transaction as a defining moment for the company. Fox indicated that integrating premium live content with a major streaming distribution platform would create new opportunities for advertising sales, audience engagement, and content delivery. 

The acquisition also provides Fox with greater control over how viewers discover and access content. Roku’s operating system powers smart televisions and streaming devices used by millions of consumers, making it a significant gateway for streaming services seeking audience reach. 

Transaction Details and Ownership Structure

According to information released by the companies, Roku shareholders will receive $96 in cash plus Fox stock for each Roku share held. The cash-and-stock structure allows Fox to complete the purchase while maintaining a substantial portion of ownership among existing shareholders. 

Fox said it will finance the transaction using cash reserves and additional financing arrangements. Reports indicated that Morgan Stanley is providing bridge financing valued at approximately $12 billion to support the acquisition. 

Boards of directors at both companies have approved the agreement. The transaction remains subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory reviews and approval by Roku shareholders. Company statements indicated that they expect the process to continue through the coming months before a targeted closing in 2027. 

Market reaction reflected the scale of the acquisition. Roku shares rose following reports of the agreement, while Fox shares declined in premarket trading after the announcement. Investors evaluated both the strategic rationale of the deal and the financial commitments required to complete it.

Roku’s Position in the Streaming Market

Founded by Anthony Wood, Roku has developed from a streaming hardware company into a major television platform business. Its operating system powers smart televisions produced by multiple manufacturers, while its streaming devices remain widely used across North America and other markets. 

The company generates a significant portion of its revenue from advertising, content distribution agreements, and platform services. The Roku Channel has become a key component of its business, offering free ad-supported content and premium subscription options.

In recent months, Roku expanded its content offerings and platform services. The company introduced new subscription options, including distribution arrangements involving Fox One, allowing users to access Fox content directly through Roku’s ecosystem. Those partnerships provided an existing business relationship between the companies before acquisition discussions became public. 

Reports published days before the announcement indicated that Roku had been exploring strategic alternatives, including a potential sale. Interest reportedly stemmed from the company’s large audience base and established advertising platform. 

Anthony Wood is expected to join Fox’s board following completion of the transaction. Fox stated that Roku will continue operating as an open platform serving a wide range of streaming providers and content partners.Â