Three generations of careful chiropractic.
The story of a family practice that began with a single question about a mysterious headache — and grew into an interdisciplinary clinic serving two locations across the Greater Toronto Area.
Dr. Adrian Grice.
In 1959, Dr. Adrian Grice opened a small chiropractic practice after his own treatment for what would eventually be named neck-tongue syndrome changed the course of his career. He went on to help define the condition in the medical literature and became known in the chiropractic community for careful assessment and conservative, evidence-based treatment.
His work earned the respect of both his patients and his peers — and laid the foundation for the practice that still carries the Grice name today.
A family who kept asking better questions.
Dr. Adrian's work passed to his sons Dr. Kevin Grice in Newmarket and Dr. Leslie Grice in Toronto — each a graduate of the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College and each a practising chiropractor for more than three decades. Today Dr. Kyle A. Grice, a third-generation chiropractor and New York Chiropractic College graduate, leads the Toronto clinic alongside his father and extends the family's specialization in corrective biomechanics and ScoliBrace treatment.
The first clinic opens
Dr. Adrian Grice begins practice and contributes to the medical literature describing neck-tongue syndrome.
A second generation
Dr. Leslie Grice graduates from the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College and joins the Toronto practice.
Growing the Toronto clinic
Dr. Kyle A. Grice graduates from New York Chiropractic College and returns to the family practice.
Advanced postural care
Chiropractic BioPhysics certification brings modern corrective methods to both locations.
An interdisciplinary team
Six regulated health professions working side-by-side under one roof at two Ontario locations.
The work, quietly done.
We are not the loudest clinic in Ontario. We do not promise outcomes we cannot deliver, and we do not sell packages of care before we know what a patient actually needs.
What we do instead is read the same notes, share the same rooms, and treat the whole person — whether that person arrives with a sports injury, a recovery from a motor vehicle accident, a long-standing posture concern, or simply a sore back from a long day at a desk.