Danielle Gray alias Dr. Cryo Auto-Immune
slangin' hopium at Wayne, PA
Website · restorechiropractic.com
Practice location
205 W Lancaster Ave #3
Wayne, PA 19087
Funnel-first framing that runs on persuasion, light on published evidence.
Oh, look at Danielle Gray, the 'Cryo Auto-Immune' queen, who's so passionate about 'restoring health' that she's forgotten her chiropractic license only covers your spine! She's out here selling 'detox' saunas and 'inflammation' programs like they're medical miracles, all while hiding behind a cash-only membership model and 13 secret Amazon affiliate links. Truly, a master of the 'innovative' grift, turning fear of auto-immune disease into a recurring revenue stream for her non-standard therapies.
High grift signals
Score breakdown
Direct answer
Often searched as Dr Danielle Gray. Dr. Trust Me Bro analyzed Danielle Gray's claim that "auto immune conditions" using transcript and metadata cross-checked against academic sources. Peer-reviewed literature indicates the claim is mixed in the medical literature: Several randomized controlled trials report short‑term reductions in anxiety and depression symptoms after Reiki compared with no-treatment or waitlist controls in adults with high baseline distress, community-dwelling older adults, and students, with improvements in mood and Depression/Anxiety/Stress Scale scores and anxiety/depression scores that persist at follow-up. [1] A systematic review and meta-analysis of biofield therapies (including Reiki, Therapeutic Touch, Healing Touch, and similar modalities) found statistically significant small-to-moderate effects on symptoms associated with mental disorders, including anxiety and depression, suggesting that biofield therapies can modestly reduce these symptoms when used as adjuncts. [3] Another meta-analysis focusing on Reiki and mental health reported that Reiki shows a greater therapeutic effect than placebo for clinically relevant stress, depression, and anxiety, with GRADE evidence rated high for clinically relevant depression and moderate to high for clinically relevant anxiety, although the number of trials is small. A recent meta-analysis on Reiki and quality of life concluded that Reiki is a safe complementary intervention that can alleviate negative states such as anxiety and stress and improve quality of life in cancer patients, individuals with chronic conditions, and healthy adults. A Cochrane-style review specifically examining Reiki for anxiety and depression concluded that very few people with anxiety or depression have been included in randomized trials and that there is insufficient evidence to say whether Reiki is useful for these conditions, emphasizing the lack of robust, high-quality data. An earlier systematic review of randomized clinical trials of Reiki found only nine eligible RCTs and judged that evidence was insufficient to suggest Reiki is an effective treatment for any condition, including depression and anxiety, noting methodological limitations and inconsistent findings. An integrative review of Reiki research similarly highlighted that most existing Reiki trials are small, often at high risk of bias, and that serious methodological and reporting limitations preclude definitive conclusions about effectiveness over placebo, despite several trials showing statistically significant effects. Large, better-designed randomized trials in hospital settings comparing Reiki plus manual therapy or Reiki protocols against quiet time or usual care have failed to show significant between-group differences in anxiety or depression outcomes, suggesting any effects may be small or indistinguishable from non-specific effects such as rest and attention. Major evidence syntheses note that high-quality placebo-controlled trials are limited and that findings remain inconclusive, with small-study effects, heterogeneity, and risk of bias undermining confidence in Reiki as a stand-alone treatment for mood disorders. [4] The mainstream medical and scientific view is that while Reiki and related biofield therapies may provide modest short-term improvements in anxiety and depressive symptoms, primarily as complementary interventions that promote relaxation and subjective well-being, the current evidence base is limited by small samples, methodological weaknesses, and heterogeneity, so Reiki is not considered an evidence-based primary treatment for anxiety or major depressive disorder. Major reviews and conventional clinical resources regard Reiki as a safe adjunct that patients may choose to use alongside established treatments (such as psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy), but emphasize that there is insufficient high-quality evidence to recommend Reiki as a stand-alone, first-line therapy for anxiety or depression, and they call for larger, rigorously controlled trials to clarify its specific efficacy beyond placebo. [2]
Key findings
- False Authority: The host uses the title 'Dr.' without clearly identifying as a chiropractor (DC), implying broad medical authority to treat systemic conditions like auto-immune disease and inflammation.see section ↓
- Claim "Is Reiki effective for anxiety or depression?": mixed in the medical literature.see section ↓
- Claim "Worry about Alzheimer’s and dementia": mixed in the medical literature.see section ↓
- Danielle Gray shows credential inflation relative to stated vs likely credentials.see section ↓
- Dr Danielle Gray is marketed with a doctor title, but reviewed credentials indicate Chiropractor (DC) rather than an MD/DO physician license.see section ↓
- The state chiropractic board likely issued Dr. Gray's 'Dr.' title, but her advice to treat auto-immune disease, systemic inflammation, and detoxification vastly exceeds the scope of a chiropractor, who is licensed only for musculoskeletal/spine care.see section ↓
- Claim "Rheumatoid Arthritis": mixed in the medical literature.see section ↓
- Claim "psoriatic arthritis": supported by peer-reviewed sources.see section ↓
Claims & evidence
22 health claims scanned; none cleared the evidence bar (quoted wording plus live and archived citations) or none were flagged as outside license scope in this material.
Manipulation
False Authority
transcript · cited
The host uses the title 'Dr.' without clearly identifying as a chiropractor (DC), implying broad medical authority to treat systemic conditions like auto-immune disease and inflammation. Likely motive: To attract patients seeking medical cures for internal diseases who would not typically visit a spine specialist.
“Dr. Danielle Gray and her team are focused on helping patients restore their health”
Fear Mongering
transcript · cited
The narrative frames 'inflammation' as a hidden, dangerous barrier to health that requires proprietary services (cryo, PEMF) to fix, creating anxiety to drive sales. Likely motive: To justify the sale of expensive, non-standard therapies by manufacturing a health crisis.
“inflammation was preventing several of her patients from achieving optimal results”
False Dichotomy
transcript · cited
The content claims cryotherapy is superior to ice baths for therapeutic benefits, implying ice baths are useless, to sell the expensive machine service. Likely motive: To differentiate and justify the high cost of cryotherapy services over free, effective alternatives.
“Cryotherapy can provide faster cooling and a more significant reduction in temperature compared to the slower cooling process of traditional ice baths or cold packs”
Commerce & grift map
The grift flows from fear-based content about 'inflammation' and 'auto-immune' issues to high-cost cash-only memberships for non-standard therapies (cryo, PEMF, sauna). The hidden Amazon affiliate links add a secondary revenue stream, while the lack of disclosure hides the financial motive.
Amazon
Supplement / product
Amazon pays referring clinicians a commission (typically 1-10%) on product sales generated via their affiliate links. Vendor page language: "Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world."
Doc Bro outbound link (live) · Archive pending
Vendor provider compensation page (live) · Archive pending
Vendor language on provider benefit
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world.”
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Operating agreement Program policies Conditions of use Contact us © 1996-2025, Amazon.com, Inc.”
Restore Cryosauna
Coaching program
The practice owns the cryosauna equipment and charges patients directly for sessions, profiting from the high-cost membership model. Vendor page language: "Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world."
Doc Bro outbound link (live) · Archive pending
Vendor provider compensation page (live) · Archive pending
Vendor language on provider benefit
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world.”
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Operating agreement Program policies Conditions of use Contact us © 1996-2025, Amazon.com, Inc.”
BrainTap
Coaching program
The practice owns the BrainTap equipment and charges patients for HRV testing sessions, profiting from the membership model. Vendor page language: "Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world."
Doc Bro outbound link (live) · Archive pending
Vendor provider compensation page (live) · Archive pending
Vendor language on provider benefit
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world.”
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Operating agreement Program policies Conditions of use Contact us © 1996-2025, Amazon.com, Inc.”
PEMF Therapy
Coaching program
The practice owns the PEMF equipment and charges patients for sessions, profiting from the membership model. Vendor page language: "Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world."
Doc Bro outbound link (live) · Archive pending
Vendor provider compensation page (live) · Archive pending
Vendor language on provider benefit
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Amazon Associates - Amazon’s affiliate marketing program Welcome to one of the largest affiliate marketing programs in the world.”
- “Earn Commissions.Sign up Operating agreement Program policies Conditions of use Contact us © 1996-2025, Amazon.com, Inc.”
Labs pitched
- BrainTap HRV Testing
“BrainTap HRV Testing evaluates heart rate variability, offering insights into autonomic nervous system function and resilience”
How the money flows
- Affiliate / promo linkUndisclosed 13 Amazon product links with 'BUY NOW' anchors, likely generating referral commissions. “BUY NOW”
“BUY NOW”
Store links detected
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
- BUY NOWMedium likelihood
“Amazon product/store link alongside supplement commerce language”
Credentials & scope
Glossary: Chiropractor (“Dr.”)
Stated: none · Likely: Chiropractor
Danielle Gray holds a Chiropractor (chiropractor) license but advertises treating systemic diseases (auto-immune, inflammation, detox) and internal conditions, which is a clear case of credential inflation.
Pennsylvania State Board of Chiropractic Practice
Dr. Gray likely violates PA chiropractic board rules by treating systemic diseases (auto-immune, inflammation) and offering detoxification, which are outside the scope. She also fails to clearly identify as a DC and does not disclose financial relationships with Amazon vendors.
PA Chiropractic scope is limited to musculoskeletal and nervous system conditions via spinal adjustment. Advertising must identify the provider as a DC, not an MD. Financial relationships with vendors must be disclosed.
Scope comparison mirror
Side-by-side view of the archived marketing homepage and what a Chiropractor scope permits near Wayne, PA. Open the mirror for the full comparison: archive on the left, permitted scope and licensed-care paths on the right.
Mirror generated 2026-07-16 13:41 UTC. The archive pane loads styles and images from the intake snapshot.
When the service is also outside their license
This pattern gets sharper when the service routed to your FSA or HSA also sits outside the practitioner's licensed scope. A provider advertising to diagnose or treat conditions their state board does not authorize is already operating past the edge of their license. Pair that with a cash-pay, FSA or HSA funded model that keeps the work away from any insurer or government program, and there is no claims reviewer, no audit trail, and no payer left to ask whether the care was appropriate or even within the provider's remit. The tax advantaged dollars do the paying, the patient carries the substantiation, and the scope question never reaches anyone with the authority to raise it.
Validated associated properties
Surfaces tied to this Doc Bro by domain, branding, or funnel routing. Third-party platforms are labeled as routes, not as owned properties.
Analyzed
- OwnedOfficial site (restorechiropractic.com)
- UnverifiedLinked commerce or practice (amzn.to)
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Submission DBo0evCnHNEthFwjTuNu8
Fight disinformation
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Reply snippets
Before you buy the protocol: Dr. Trust Me Bro fact-checked Danielle Gray's claims with peer-reviewed sources, https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/DBo0evCnHNEthFwjTuNu8. White-coat charisma isn't evidence.
Full DTMB scan on Danielle Gray: https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/DBo0evCnHNEthFwjTuNu8
Drop these in YouTube comments, Reddit threads, and forums, link back to this scan, not vibes.
Recent mentions (this doc)
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Whambulance
Challenge this scan or Wall of Fame entry for Danielle Gray. Public log, not legal arbitration.
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- Doc Bro ID: MqJT31RILgGvuhoXp_Dbh
- Wall entry: /influencer/MqJT31RILgGvuhoXp_Dbh
- Analysis ID: DBo0evCnHNEthFwjTuNu8
- Source: https://restorechiropractic.com/
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Citations
Peer-reviewed and index sources cited in this report.
- [1] Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Alleviates Depression, Anxiety, and Internalized Stigma Compared With Treatment-as-Usual Among Head and Neck Cancer Patients: Findings From a Randomized Controlled Trial
- [2] A Randomised Controlled Single-Blind Trial of the Efficacy of ...
- [3] Therapeutic effects of Reiki on interventions for anxiety - PMC
- [4] A randomised controlled single-blind trial of the effects of Reiki and ...
- [5] Guideline-Driven Management of Hypertension: An Evidence-Based Update.
- [6] ASPEN-FELANPE Clinical Guidelines.
- [7] ESPEN guideline: Clinical nutrition in inflammatory bowel disease.
- [8] When Is Parenteral Nutrition Appropriate?
- [9] Benefits of Metformin Repurposed for Alzheimer’s Disease Prevention, Evidence From Mendelian Randomization
- [10] Evidence-based prevention of Alzheimer's disease: systematic review and meta-analysis of 243 observational prospective studies and 153 randomised controlled trials
- [11] Orexin Receptor Antagonists for the Prevention and Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease and Associated Sleep Disorders
- [12] Sex Differences in Longitudinal Tau-PET in Preclinical Alzheimer Disease: A Meta-Analysis.
- [13] Anti-TNF Antibody Therapy in Rheumatoid Arthritis and the Risk of Serious Infections and Malignancies
- [14] 2021 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis
- [15] Sexually Transmitted Infections Treatment Guidelines, 2021
- [16] 2021 American College of Rheumatology Guideline for the ...
- [17] SAT0233 Comparison of Abatacept and Other Biologic DMARDS for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients: A Systematic Literature Review and Network Meta-Analysis
- [18] Efficacy and Safety of Antidepressants in Patients With Comorbid Depression and Medical Diseases: An Umbrella Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
- [19] Balancing risks and benefits of cannabis use: umbrella review of meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials and observational studies.
- [20] CONSORT 2010 statement: extension to randomised pilot and feasibility trials
- [21] CONSORT 2010 Explanation and Elaboration: updated guidelines for reporting parallel group randomised trials
- [22] Understanding Multiple Sclerosis | Brain Institute
- [23] Multiple Sclerosis - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIH