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- May 14, 2014
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Personally, something I've come to appreciate in my clinical rotations was the palpatory techniques we've developed. I never really realized how competent I'd gotten with the subtle...dare I say TARTs....even when compared to practicing physicians. A few MD attendings were actually impressed and kinda dissed their MSK training. Of course...if the PE stays dead and we stop treating Clinical Skills classes like discount Acting 101 classes that would probably help with that.
I think Chapman's points actually line up accurately with the points used in acupuncture, so we're going well into the BC millennia lol.I’m not going to waste much energy on this, but the logic of this argument is indeed ridiculous. Legitimate medicine is backed by high quality, objective evidence. I could easily find a horde of people on social media that believe Chiropractic, Magnetic Healing, and Chakra Field Therapy are incredibly effective and have relieved a great deal of suffering. Does that mean that an entire medical degree should be centered on these practices? Or perhaps we should integrate them into the DO curriculum? Shouldn’t medicine do it’s best to remain a place of evidence based therapies and reject ideas like “somatic dysfunctions” and other remnants of 1800s quakery?
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