

Lisochka said:what is the difference between alopatic and osteopathic?
That is a great article. Very honest and upfront. 👍Darch said:someone posted this in another forum...
http://www.mercola.com/1999/archive/paradox_of_osteopathy.htm
enjoy
letmein!please? said:Osteopathy has pseudo-scientific roots, but this was short-lived. Most "pseudo-scientific" practices are not used today, although some still are, but by a small minority of practicing osteopaths. In recent years it has become increasingly recognized (in the academic community) as a legitimate medical practice, and this will surely continue in the future. It's main "credo" is to "treat the body as a functional unit."
Depending on how important this sort of thing is to you, another big difference is:
Allopathic = MD
Osteopathic = DO
Call me shallow, but after 4 years of med school I want an MD after my name. If you're less shallow than I am, you might find being a DO to be very stimulating and satisfying work. Some might see it as a more "humanistic" approach to medicine. Acceptance to Osteopathic programs is less competitive and, on average, slightly easier than Allopathic programs. This certainly does not help the reputation of the DO degree, despite the fact that many consider Osteopathy quite difficult to study because they learn "all the stuff that MD's learn plus all the uniquely osteopathic stuff", a claim I have heard several times before.
DO's also place in many of the same residencies as MD grads, and can do many of the same specialties...like surgery, for example...plus the unique osteopathic practices too. There are quite a few DO/PHD-ers out there too.
Lisochka said:what is the difference between alopatic and osteopathic?
gary5 said:If you like to take alternative medications, e.g. herbs from the store, and are interested in chinese medicine, yoga, acupuncture, etc, then you want osteopathic. Otherwise, you want western medicine, aka allopathic.
OSUdoc08 said:Osteopathic medicine does not include training in chinese medicine, yoga, or acupuncture. There is very minimal training in herbal medicine. You are thinking about DOM's & ND's (not DO's.)
Osteopathic medicine IS western medicine. Osteopathic medical schools teach the exact same pharmacology courses as Allopathic medical schools.
👎
JonnyG said:Let's get this straight osteopathy is actually AMERICAN medicine, while allopathy is EUROPEAN medicine. In other words, not really any difference. Well except for occassional snubs, but all in good fun.
tulane06 said:I don't agree with the whole allopathic label thing - it was invented by the creator of homeopathic medicine (Hahnemann, homeopathy is now widely recognized as a fraud discipline) to disparage the type of medicine performed by M.D.s.
Goose-d said:OSUdoc, whats the deal with the whole floating cranial bone theory?
OSUdoc08 said:Ask me after next semester, when we learn it. I don't know anything about it at this point.
(Other than that an MD pediatrician in town does craniosacral often on her patients. She is also an OMM instructor at our school.)
Which ironically enough was (part of) the former name of Drexel's allopathic med school--Medical College of Pennsylvania-Hahnemann 😉 (It was founded as a school of homeopathic medicine and eventually became an allopathic medical school.)tulane06 said:I don't agree with the whole allopathic label thing - it was invented by the creator of homeopathic medicine (Hahnemann, homeopathy is now widely recognized as a fraud discipline) to disparage the type of medicine performed by M.D.s.