R. Keith McCormick (born June 17, 1954) is an American modern pentathlete and U.S. Army veteran who represented the United States at the 1976 Summer Olympics, as an alternate.[1][2] He finished second in the Junior World Championships in 1973, won the North American Pentathlon Championships in 1975,[3][4] and briefly held the American record for points scored in the Modern Pentathlon.[5] He was considered a contender to win the gold medal in 1980, when the United States boycotted the Olympics because of Russia's invasion of Afghanistan.
Since 1982, Dr. R. Keith McCormick has been a Doctor of Chiropractic in the states of Massachusetts, Colorado, and California. Dr. McCormick is also a Sports Chiropractic Physician who treats collegiate, high school and recreational athletes in Western Massachusetts.[6] He is a certified chiropractic sports physician and author of the 2009 book The Whole-Body Approach to Osteoporosis.[7][8]
McCormick suffered 12 osteoporosis-related fractures over the span of 5 years. As a response to his personal history with severe osteoporosis, McCormick founded OsteoNaturals, LLC to develop supplements.
McCormick wrote a second book in 2023, Great Bones, Taking Control of Your Osteoporosis. In this book, he explains the fundamentals of osteoporosis, as well as the pathophysiology of bone loss. This book targets a wide audience, from patients suffering with osteoporosis to the physicians and specialists treating it, and explains what it takes to regain skeletal health.
Great Bones, Taking Control of Your Osteoporosis (OS Medical Publications, 2023)
Journals
Osteoporosis: Integrating Biomarkers and Other Diagnostic Correlates into the Management of Bone Fragility (Alternative Medicine Review Volume 12, Number 2 2007)
^United States Olympic Book 1976: Games of the XXI Olympiad, Montreal : XII Olympic Winter Games, Innsbruck : VII Pan American Games, Mexico City by F. Don Miller; the United States Olympic Committee, 1976. p. 277
^(July 11, 1976). "Roster of U.S. Athletes for Olympic Games at Montreal", The New York Times, p. 152.