If their symptoms warrent a rapid strep test, you will do it. Sore throat and fever for 3+ days = rapid strep test. Cervical neck pain with stiffness = muscle energy. Come on, you're a year ahead of me, I shouldn't be explaining this stuff to you. Of course you're not going to perform OMM if it isn't warrented. Rib raising has a history of making some patients with URI symptoms feel better, with zero risk. Why wouldn't you do it with someone who comes in complaining of flu-like symptoms in addition to any other treatments an MD would do? I had a plain old stiff neck cured with ME the other day. Not a huge deal, but that's one less drug I had to put in my body and I was able to resume my normal activitiy of hunching over a book for the rest of the day.
Don't worry, tough guy, I take your advice with a grain of salt...and FYI indications for a rapid strep test are a little more complicated and variable than "fever and ST for 3 days" . Swollen tonsils / nodes? Petechiae on the roof of the mouth? GI complaints? You use clinical judgement, not a textbook definition of "when to administer a rapid strep test." Many people don't have a fever, and can have any combination of those sx.
And JP, yes, I have been negative about the AOA and various aspects of the osteopathic profession, most of which I outlined in a thread I posted nearly a year ago: "A critical review of Osteopathy." That paper was the product of nearly a year of rough drafts and edits, and hopefully got some people to think about aspects of this profession that need revision.
Do I think the Osteopathic profession is worthless? No, of course not, and I'd be an idiot if I did. Do I care that I'm a DO versus and MD? No, but I do care about how my profession is portrayed by its leaders / loudest proponents.
1. Our current leadership is atrocious; the AOA pres would rather accept DO students with sub-standard scores that 'truly love osteopathic medicine' (not sure how you'd do that...) if it meant more enthusiasm about OMT, the AOA, etc...
2. I've posted infinite threads criticizing cranial as a dubious practice and backed them up with a few systemmatic reviews, logic and philosophical beliefs.
3. Yes, I've been critical of OMT, but mainly in so much as how / when it is employed, and how it is advertised by the profession. I'm not denying the advantage of our musculoskeletal education in terms of helping us understand clinical physiology / mechanics; I am denying the proclaimed effectiveness as being better than PT (or the argument that if someone's going to make money on manual medicine, it may as well be us).
People like JP and J15 dismiss any and all dissent in OMT as whining and bitching by supposed "MD rejects." Anyone who's applied to medical school knows it's a crapshoot, whether you're applying DO or MD; assuming people like me are "md rejects" is arrogant and stereotypical, and lamenting the absence of a 100% embrace of OMT by all DO students is unrealisitic and naive.
Very few practicing DOs incorporate any meaningful amount of OMT into their practice. Until the AOA takes a 21st century stance on medicine, swallows it's pride, and does some serious internal reviews, there's going to be conflict by those who remain a part of the debate (most people who feel like I do don't spend any effort and simply go allo).