But you didn't cite anything like that...i read the abstracts of all the studies on the first page (the ones I had access to thru my pubmed account) and none showed a difference when properly controlled. You can't just say the studies exist and then call me ignorant. Please, teach me!
The burden of proof is on OMT to show that the sneaky-sweet techniques give a benefit that good ol' massage doesn't.
Until then... crap.
PS - let me point out that the far and away majority of DO training is identical in awesome-ness to MD training. It's just the whacky OMT/sublaxation crap that claims to fix MEDICAL problems instead of just structural problems that is a waste of time.
EDIT: And I'm out for the night. And maybe the week. I'm a little behind on the ol' lecture podcasts...
DO here. A few things on your point of view:
1 - DOs tend to have lower MCATs and/or GPAs than MDs entering medical school. People can make up all kinds of reasons as to why that is - who cares. The important thing that people seem to ignore is that we are taught the same stuff and if you can't handle it (whether at an MD or DO school) then you won't become a doctor, period. For people who truly believe in OMM (and that is their right) they spend more time focusing on it and become good at it, and for the rest who don't care either way or just see it as an inconvenience, they just do what is required of them. We used and read through the same typical textbooks allopathic schools use.
2 - Please don't comment on what OMM is or how it is learned if you don't know. We never once learned about subluxations or what they were (except in the orthopedic sense). We had one or two lectures total during the first 2 years on "alternative medicine - herbal use, acupunture, homeopathy" so we knew what it was when patients talked about it.
3 - The OMM we learned was for musculoskeletal use or to relieve the symptoms of pain - ie: a patient with a partially herniated lumbar disc scheduled for surgery next week comes in today with terrible pain, what can you do to relieve it? Nobody ever taught us that OMM
cures diabetes, cancer, or any other non-musculoskeletal problem. We learned some nonsense in my eyes (ie: cranial), but some of the techniques and tests we learned are used by physical therapists and orthopedists as well. Again, please don't comment on OMM teachings if you don't know how it is taught.
4 - Show me a stat that says X # of osteopathic students applied to dermatology residencies and only Y % got in. DOs do have their own residencies. Chances are,
in general, the student with the undergrad 3.0 and 24 on the MCAT who says they want to be a dermatologist won't be at the top of their class and won't score in the 90th percentile on their boards, be it in MD or DO school. During 2nd year, our class of 300 was polled as to how many of us wanted to go into dermatology and 2, yes 2 people raised their hands. I love when people say "well if two students, an MD and a DO apply to residency X with equal stats..." You show me two people with the same stats, same personality, same upbringing, and same story as to why they made their life decisions and I will give you every cent currently in my bank account.
5 - Did you choose your doctor by looking them up in the yellow pages? Or were you walking down the street and saw a sign in front of their practice and just decided to go there? You get patients by referrals, consultations in the hospital, and word of mouth. The layperson who is being evaluated for episodes of dyspnia or a lung abcess is concerned about their health. You and some of the people in the pre-allo forum are healthy and are concerned about how others will view you. Two totally different thought processes.