
A "whole person" approach
Instead of just treating you for specific symptoms or illnesses, D.O.s regard your body as an integrated whole.

Osteopathic manipulative treatment
Osteopathic physicians use their hands to diagnose illness and injury and to encourage your body's natural tendency toward good health.

Trained to know YOU
Osteopathic medical schools emphasize training students to become primary care physicians.
Availability
If you are an established patient and in need of medical care, please call for an appointment. Brewster Medical Associates PC no longer has walk-in services and we are unable to take new patients at this time. We apologize that we are unable to return calls requesting to become a new patient. For up-to-date information about COVID-19, please contact the MA Department of Public Health listed in our resource directory.
About Osteopathic Medicine
You are more than just the sum of your body parts. That’s why doctors of osteopathic medicine (DOs) practice a “whole person” approach to health care. Instead of just treating your specific symptoms, osteopathic physicians concentrate on treating you as a whole.
Osteopathic physicians understand how all the body’s systems are interconnected and how each one affects the others. They receive special training in the musculoskeletal system so that they better understand how that system influences the condition of all other body systems. In addition, DOs are trained to identify and correct structural problems, which can assist your body’s natural tendency toward health and self-healing.

Providers

James M. Woods
James M. Woods
PA-C

Scott M. Graham
Scott M. Graham
DO

Brittany Enz
Brittany Enz
APRN

Wendy Treash
Wendy Treash
PA-C