angrysoba
Philosophile
Thank you for your responses.
As to the quoted, I would ask what your experience is in the matter.
A few years ago I suffered a serious injury on a job. Broke my back and my left scapula.
When I presented in the ER the first Dr. I saw was an MD, he ordered some X-Rays and then wrote me several prescriptions for the pain.
But, after the first round of X-Rays I was seen by a different doctor, a DO. He ordered a CAT-scan as they had found the broken scapula, and sure enough that's when they found the broken back.
He, the DO, didn't write me a bunch of prescriptions but instead asked me what I needed, if anything.
As it turned out all I really needed was something to help me sleep, so he prescribed 10 tabs of 10mg valium.
I'm not suggesting that one was right and one was wrong. I'm just pointing out the difference.
So according to your anecdote, the osteopath used real medicine instead of osteopathy and that osteopaths are as good as doctors despite but not because of their osteopathic training, but because of their medical training.