Good Vibrations Family Chiropractic & Massage operates a six-chiropractor clinic at 4060 Adams Avenue in Kensington, San Diego, where founders Dr. Joe Merlo, DC and Dr. Stacey Merlo, DC have led the practice since October 2005. The staff delivers prenatal chiropractic care using the Webster technique, a specific sacral analysis and diversified adjustment protocol designed for patients through all three trimesters and into the postpartum period. Pediatric patients begin as newborns, with infant spinal screenings that assess atlas alignment and cranial symmetry before progressing to age-appropriate adjustments for developmental milestones. The clinic's soft-tissue services include therapeutic massage and dry needling administered in the same visit sequence as spinal adjustments, a layered manual-therapy approach that complements the deep-tissue bodywork available at BaiBoon Thai Massage on the Adams Avenue corridor. Initial evaluations run computerized nerve scans and muscle tension imaging that map interference patterns along the full spine, giving each of the six doctors a baseline before any manual adjustment begins. Sports-focused protocols address runners, surfers, and athletes across the 92116 corridor with extremity work on shoulders, hips, knees, and ankles alongside active rehab programming built around sport-specific movement screens. Network Spinal Analysis rounds out the technique menu for patients who respond to lighter-force contacts along the spine's attachment points. The Kensington village location puts the practice within sight of the Kensington sign and one block from the Kensington-Normal Heights Branch Library on Adams Avenue, anchoring it where Normal Heights transitions into the Kensington district. Postural retraining and home-exercise protocols prescribed after adjustment sessions build core stabilization in tandem with the reformer-based programming at Beyond Pilates Studio, Kensington for patients managing disc herniation or sacroiliac instability through combined chiropractic and movement-based recovery. Each treatment room runs a flexion-distraction table configured for decompression across cervical, thoracic, and lumbar segments.