Osteopathic Practitioner
Katie Hogg

BSc (Hons) Ani. Sci. (Equine) A.R.C.S.

BSc (Hons) Ost. Med. D.O., N.D.

MSc (Hons) Ani. Manip. (Ost)

Katie Hogg

Katie studied Animal Science (Equine) at Imperial College graduating in 2003. She then went on to study Osteopathic Medicine at the British College of Osteopathic Medicine, graduating in 2007.
Katie completed a Masters in Animal Manipulation (Osteopathy) part time whilst working at Osteopathic practices in Ledbury, Usk and Cheltenham.
Katie Set up her own business in 2009 and started working alongside ProPodiatry in 2011.
Katie is passionate about helping and educating people about their health and conditions. She enjoys being able to work out the diagnosis and then explain it clearly and succinctly.
Owning her own clinic has been a lifelong ambition and going into a partnership with Lee enabled this to become a reality in 2021.

What Katie says about her role:

"Using osteopathic philosophy and techniques as well as medical and anatomical knowledge, it is a fantastic, interesting and challenging job. I find being able to treat my patients with bespoke treatment plans and advice very rewarding."

Beverage Choice

Katie needs to start the day with a strong black coffee and moves onto weak black earl grey tea when enough caffeine has been consumed.
Tarquin's Gin and Chase Williams Gin for a relaxing drink in the evenings. She is quite a gin snob.

Spare time

Katie enjoys training and running her dog at agility. She initially started this fun sport in 2007 with her first dog, Robbie, a rescue collie cross. She has recently started back to training with her new dog Moss, a welsh sheepdog.
Moss comes to the practice and loves being a working pup.

Professional aspirations

Katie has two Bachelor of science degrees and a Master of science degree. She dreams of one day starting a PhD but has promised her husband she will wait a few years!
"Professional approach and always puts me on the right road."
“Katie is extremely professional and personable. Clear in explaining cause and effects, as well as demonstrations of mechanisms behind the injury. Would highly recommend"
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