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FrontPage Baltimore Sun

Started by neolium
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Pretty good article. However, I'm sure the title of the article will irritate some on here:
"Osteopaths enter mainstream"

edit: Oh and it looks like the front page pic is a patient receiving cranial OMM, no? 😱
 
i got really excited and thought this was about the wire.

err......

as far as using the word osteopaths, wasn't that brushed a bit? how osteopathic physicians are losing their identities?
 
Oops, I posted this elsewhere, not realizing someone else started it...so I merged mine with this one.


My perceptions of the Baltimore, MD area are that they were not very DO friendly. However, here's a nice pro-DO article.

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/health/bal-te.osteopath03mar03,0,2151389.story?page=1

Selected talking points from the article:

  • Even in Maryland, with no homegrown schools of osteopathy, [DOs] ranks have more than tripled, from 182 to 680, with osteopaths practicing and teaching in the Johns Hopkins and University of Maryland medical systems.
  • Still, like many colleagues, Cymet, DO rejects the "alternative medicine " label. "No, I'm a doctor," he said. "I take care of people. I use science as a guiding principle, but it doesn't answer all my questions."
  • He began medical school at Northwestern University but dropped out after a semester. "I did well, but found that it wasn't broad-minded," he said. "I felt I could go to medical school and fight to get them to change their philosophy, or go to a D.O. school where they agree with my philosophy."
  • At Hopkins, Dr. Parissa Salemi is a fellow in pediatric endocrinology, treating patients with diabetes, thyroid problems and growth disorders. She prescribes insulin for diabetics - but also recommends manipulation to improve blood flow to tingling feet.
  • "I think many physicians approach patients in a holistic fashion, but I think as a D.O., you're almost guaranteed to have that holistic approach," McPeak said.
 
DO's are called "osteopaths" because they can break bones with their martial arts. Some can even break bones with their mind powers.

That is the root of the word. Obviously, many DO's now practice medicine without breaking your bones with a quick roundhouse kick.
 
TT, quit derailing threads and stay on topic. This topic is the article, not some derailment and DO put-down you want to make while thinly veiling it in sarcasm.

I'm only going to say it once.
 
Obviously, many DO's now practice medicine without breaking your bones with a quick roundhouse kick.

Ah, a practice orginally initiated by none other than Chuck Norris, D.O.

:laugh::laugh::laugh:

Seriously though, regardless of the use of the term "osteopath" I think this is a great article for osteopathic medicine as a whole.
 
Pretty good article. However, I'm sure the title of the article will irritate some on here:
"Osteopaths enter mainstream"

edit: Oh and it looks like the front page pic is a patient receiving cranial OMM, no? 😱

Yeah, I am waiting for the first idiot poster to come on and argue for a letter writing campaign because it said osteopath.
 
DO's are called "osteopaths" because they can break bones with their martial arts. Some can even break bones with their mind powers.

That is the root of the word. Obviously, many DO's now practice medicine without breaking your bones with a quick roundhouse kick.

No, that is Chuck Norris.
 
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TT, quit derailing threads and stay on topic. This topic is the article, not some derailment and DO put-down you want to make while thinly veiling it in sarcasm.

I'm only going to say it once.

[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQagCZPRk2c&feature=related[/YOUTUBE]
 
Great to see the article. Got to admit: it warms my heart, as an aspiring DO.

But it doesn't tell me anything I don't know about the profession. And, in fact, a bit to my dismay, it highlights to me my need for validation of the osteopathic profession. I think this same need is what makes me feel inferior and worried when I hear that, as DO's, we'll be limited in this or that way, or that our education is inferior...

I guess what I'm trying to say is that we should move past the need to establish that we're actual doctors. Legally and qualitatively we are. You don't see MD's sharing articles with each other about how they're patients are glad to be with allopathic doctors. If patients did express such sentiments, wouldn't it be an implicit rejection of us, if anything?

I guess I'm not sure where I'm going with this... But I don't think our public image will be significantly helped by more testimonials from patients expressing affection for "alternate medicine" or descriptions of how we offer special care. What we do need is some hard science backing up OMM and the real differences in our exam styles, if there are differences. You can see the research is finally ramping up--thank god. I think TCOM will be key in this effort, and they have already released some studies--I read a cool one on the lymph pump. I think such studies will encourage recently minted and practicing DO's to consider the extra treatments that they've learned.

We need more scientific studies that validate what we do. I'm confident that "touch" and manipulation are key to medicine. I was a tennis player and I used to love my chiropractic treatment. Plus, how many hundreds of millions do chiropractors pull in? The need is there. We just need some science to make us more consistent with the rationalist image of the doctor that prevails in the US. (I think other countries are a little kinder to alternate treatments--some are so by economic necessity, of course...)
 
Great to see the article. Got to admit: it warms my heart, as an aspiring DO.

But it doesn't tell me anything I don't know about the profession. And, in fact, a bit to my dismay, it highlights to me my need for validation of the osteopathic profession. I think this same need is what makes me feel inferior and worried when I hear that, as DO's, we'll be limited in this or that way, or that our education is inferior...

I guess what I'm trying to say is that we should move past the need to establish that we're actual doctors. Legally and qualitatively we are. You don't see MD's sharing articles with each other about how they're patients are glad to be with allopathic doctors. If patients did express such sentiments, wouldn't it be an implicit rejection of us, if anything?

I guess I'm not sure where I'm going with this... But I don't think our public image will be significantly helped by more testimonials from patients expressing affection for "alternate medicine" or descriptions of how we offer special care. What we do need is some hard science backing up OMM and the real differences in our exam styles, if there are differences. You can see the research is finally ramping up--thank god. I think TCOM will be key in this effort, and they have already released some studies--I read a cool one on the lymph pump. I think such studies will encourage recently minted and practicing DO's to consider the extra treatments that they've learned.

We need more scientific studies that validate what we do. I'm confident that "touch" and manipulation are key to medicine. I was a tennis player and I used to love my chiropractic treatment. Plus, how many hundreds of millions do chiropractors pull in? The need is there. We just need some science to make us more consistent with the rationalist image of the doctor that prevails in the US. (I think other countries are a little kinder to alternate treatments--some are so by economic necessity, of course...)

It's a hard line of logic to convey but you did a great job! I'm onboard with your reasoning. 👍
 
Shyrem- TT is going to GA-PCOM....

he just cant resist the satire.