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BackTalk said:Isnt it rather easy to gain hospital privileges for a hospital if you are a MD? After all Im sure they love the referrals to the PT department, lab and imaging center.
rooster said:I attmepted to "enlighten" you by directing you(and even providing links) to respected and quality references/sources. Texts that are used and taught in DC school. I have told you where to go to get answers to your many questions. It is my impression that you choose to dismiss these sources.
Rooster said:I am glad to hear this. There has been quite a bit regarding "medical error" in the news recently.
Rooster said:What is your proposal to address the above?
Rooster said:>>>what is chiropractic afraid of? Oh yeah, I forgot, the "fountainhead" was devinely inspired by the "innate", no oversight needed.<<<
This is a cheapshot. Shame on you.
rooster said:You then change the topic to vaccination issues. Well I find that those opposed to chiropractic pursue this topic "ad nauseum". As for myself, I have no concern with it personally or professionally. Others can deliberate this to death. My interests are elsewhere.
Rooster said:>>The often quoted NIH studies "in favor" of chiropractic, detailed in other threads, indicate that chiropractic is only "as effective" as traditional therapy. Given the risks demonstrated above, why is it that medicine should "accept" chiropractic? No real improvements and lots of risks...<<
Another indicator of your misinformation, or more likely, your bias. I look forward to addressing this issue in the future. My schedule today will not allow for it.
Rooster said:>>Or are you a straight who believes that Palmer was some sort of health deity devinely inspired to "discover" innate?<<
Another cheapshot
emedpa said:the downside of staff listing at a hospital is that you have to agree to take city call pts x days/month who you evaluate and treat regardless of their ability to pay. great social program but a little tough on the pocketbook if it is an involved pt....for instance you are an ortho doc on city call and someone comes in with a nasty surgical fx of some kind. you have to evaluate and treat them for the duration of that medical problem which means you operate and f/u without regard to their ability to pay.the hospital eats the cost of the o.r., staff rn's etc but you spend hours in the er, or, and clinic for which you are not compensated. I have worked at places that keep a list of recommended local chiros but never seen one on call.....what would constitute a chiropractic emergency or require one to admit to an in hospital chiropractic service? nothing comes to mind......
BackTalk said:H, what study are you referencing when you say there is only limited data that, at best, suggest that chiropractic treatment is as effective, but not more so, than conventional medicine in the treatment of low back pain. Havent there been numerous studies on the subject that conclude chiropractic care or rather spinal manipulation is more effective than conventional medicine for the treatment of chronic and acute back pain? Now you know me, I'm no wizard such as yourself when it comes to interpreting research data. Im not saying you are wrong but am curious as to how you arrived at your opinion.
FoughtFyr said:BTW- the disturbing part of this study http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/...ve&db=PubMed&list_uids=10768681&dopt=Abstract is not the immunization issue. It is the fact that of chiropractors identifying themselves as "pediatric chiropractors" "presented with a hypothetical 2-week-old neonate with a fever, 17% would treat the patient themselves rather than immediately refer the patient to a doctor of medicine, doctor of osteopathy, or an emergency facility." Oops. Way scary!
Where's your data on "demonstrable risks" associated with chiropractic treatment for low back pain? I'm aware of the studies documenting risks associated with cervical manipulation, but none on LBP. In fact, the NIH article cited above states: "The rate of serious complications from chiropractic has been debated. There have been no organized prospective studies on the number of serious complications. From what is now known, the risk appears to be very low. It appears to be higher for cervical-spine, or neck, manipulation (e.g., cases of stroke have been reported). The rare complication of concern from low-back adjustment is cauda equina syndrome, estimated to occur once per millions of treatments (the number of millions varies; one study placed it at 100 million)."FoughtFyr said:But if you are going to show that chiropractic is "as effective" (but no more so) as medicine for treating low back pain, then I will continue to have concerns regarding the benefits as measured against some significant and demonstrable risks.
PublicHealth said:Here is the "limited data:" http://nccam.nih.gov/health/chiropractic/index.htm
Note the following: "Research studies of chiropractic treatment for low-back pain have been of uneven quality and insufficient to allow firm conclusions. Nonetheless, the overall sense of the data is that for low-back pain, chiropractic treatment and conventional medical treatments are about equally helpful."
PublicHealth said:Unlike FoughtFyr's comments above, this article states: "Conditions commonly treated by chiropractors include back pain, neck pain, headaches, sports injuries, and repetitive strains. Patients also seek treatment of pain associated with other conditions, such as arthritis."
PublicHealth said:First off, the study you referenced is almost five years old. Second, only 90 DCs participated in the survey. Third, results of the study may be generalized only to DCs practicing in the metro Boston area who belong to pediatric chiropractic societies and who own a practice with the name "family" but not "pain," "back," and "injury" in the practice name. Fourth, only 7% of the DCs surveyed in this study recommended against vaccination. Fifth and most importantly, the authors of this article clearly had an agenda--to shoot down pediatric chiropractic. Taken together, this article fails to support the assertion you so readily make regarding DCs' view toward immunization.
PublicHealth said:That said, the finding that 17% of the DCs surveyed would treat a neonate with a fever instead of referring to an MD, DO, or emergency facility is a bit scary. But then again, the type of care that a pediatric DC would provide a neonate with a fever was not reported in the article. As stated by the authors (p. 405): "These results may be limited because in a real situation the practitioner might have more information about the patient, would not choose between 3 exclusive options, and could reevaluate and question the patient during an office visit. The question may also have been interpreted in different ways, (ie, that the hypothetical patient had already seen a doctor of medicine or doctor of osteopathy or was concurrently seeing a pediatrician)."
PublicHealth said:Where's your data on "demonstrable risks" associated with chiropractic treatment for low back pain? I'm aware of the studies documenting risks associated with cervical manipulation, but none on LBP. In fact, the NIH article cited above states: "The rate of serious complications from chiropractic has been debated. There have been no organized prospective studies on the number of serious complications. From what is now known, the risk appears to be very low. It appears to be higher for cervical-spine, or neck, manipulation (e.g., cases of stroke have been reported). The rare complication of concern from low-back adjustment is cauda equina syndrome, estimated to occur once per millions of treatments (the number of millions varies; one study placed it at 100 million)."
PublicHealth said:With all the recent rumpus surrounding the use of NSAIDs and cardiovascular complications, chiropractic seems like a much better option for treating LBP!
FoughtFyr said:No, what I am referring to is summarized here: http://nccam.nih.gov/health/chiropractic/index.htm#app2
Several other points are helpful to keep in mind about the research findings. Many clinical trials of chiropractic analyze the effects of chiropractic manipulation alone, but chiropractic practice includes more than manipulation. Results of a trial performed in one setting (such as a managed care organization or a chiropractic college) may not completely apply in other settings. And, researchers have observed that the placebo effect may be at work in chiropractic care, as in other forms of health care." (See: http://nccam.nih.gov/health/chiropractic/index.htm#9a for specific citations)
FoughtFyr said:Guys,
With all due respect, I am bowing out of these arguments. None of us is going to convince the others of anything, and I question the utility of continued discussion. My point is that while SMT may work for LBP and other NMS conditions, it is not the panacea envisioned by Palmer. While many (most?) chiropractors realize this, some do not. The general public has no easy way to discern the beliefs or practices of a given chiropractor, because they are not generally well educated enough regarding chiropractic to ask. When they are educated, it is usually by the provider from whom they are seeking care (hardly an unbiased source). In most states, the chiropractic practice acts are written so broadly as to empower chiropractors who choose to do so to guide their patients to questionable decisions regarding their healthcare without repercussion.
I also have little question, based on significant personal experience, that chiropractors (in general) are poor at diagnosing non-NMS conditions. While this poses little problem for the patient of a competant "mixer" chiropractor, it can be (and has been) deadly to patients of straights or pseudo-mixers, whose patients may wait to seek medical therapy until their conditions are so advanced that reasonable hope is lost. Why? Because their chiropractor told them he/she was helping. I also realize that advising against immunizations is a fringe practice, but as an ED physician in an area currently hit by an epidemic of a pertussis, it is hard to ignore those "fringe" providers. And I do realize that the overwhelming majority of the pertussis cases we are seeing are from waned immunity after immunization, the very sick young unimmunized children are just a senseless reminder that the issue is very alive and real.
But I am not going to change your minds, nor you mine. So, thanks for the discussion, it has been enlightening.
- H