Thanks for that, Jack. Very informative.
All is quiet in the blogosphere this morning, so for those interested, here’s a closer look at how chiropractic is being taught and promoted in the UK.
Bearing in mind that the Ministry of Truth suspects that UK chiropractors are desperately trying to secure referrals from the NHS under contracts…
http://www.ministryoftruth.me.uk/2008/08/19/can-you-libel-woo/
…and that Jonathan Hearsey, the skeptical osteopath, wonders if such a quest might give rise to a potential conflict of interests (whilst pointing out that there’s room for pragmatic spinal manipulators as part of multidisciplinary teams or integrated clinical assessment and treatment services on the NHS)…
http://jonathanhearsey.com/?p=61
…it’s interesting to read the following on the Anglo-European College of Chiropractic’s website…
Each student [chiropractic intern] is obliged to have seen a minimum of forty new patients during the clinical year. While a number of patients will be assigned to a student during this time on a rota basis, he/she is obliged to have at least five of this number personally referred by another source.
-snip-
Rounds are another vehicle that enhances the clinical education. Students attend rounds on a rota basis with a consultant physician at Royal Bournemouth Hospital. Each week two students accompany him and his team on ward rounds in a general medical ward. While the rounds may not be completely apropos to chiropractic, students see a wide range of medical conditions, many of them in a terminal condition. The rounds also provide a first hand opportunity to observe varying signs and symptoms of pathology that would normally be seen at an earlier stage in chiropractic practice.
-snip-
Standardised or trained simulated patients are used by the Clinic to provide realistic scenarios for the assessment of a student's skills in case history taking, physical examination procedures and patient management issues.
http://www.aecc.ac.uk/college/course_information/clinical_training.asp
…because it begs the question, is that really enough practical training to prepare chiropractors for their official role as independent primary care providers?
With regard to the promotion of chiropractic, we already know that the Chairman of the General Chiropractic Council (GCC), Peter Dixon, is currently lending his ‘expertise’ to NICE’s Low Back Pain Guideline Development Group (GDG). See the GDG members’ document here:
http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/index.jsp?action=byID&o=11645
However, it seems unlikely that the data he’ll be presenting in support of chiropractic will be from the most recent systematic reviews which have collectively concluded that there is an extremely slim scientific evidence base for chiropractic spinal manipulation, and that its few benefits don’t seem to outweigh its risks…
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=3964350&postcount=55
…because it’s apparent that the GCC prefers to ignore such reviews in favour of weaker, but more chiropractic-friendly data, which it claims show that the main treatments of chiropractic are “consistently more effective” than the treatments to which they have been compared, and that chiropractic intervention is “safe, effective and cost-effective” in reducing referral to secondary care. See here:
http://www.gcc-uk.org/files/page_file/LANCET Australian study statement9Nov07.pdf
The data in question is cited in the GCC’s January 2007 publication ‘
Advice for General Practitioners, Primary Care Trusts and Local Health Boards’ and it is linked to, and critiqued, here:
http://www.skeptics.org.uk/forum/showpost.php?p=26449&postcount=203
I would also add the following to the critiques of the Meade study contained in the link above:
People familiar with clinical tests of spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) for back pain were puzzled by the outcome of the British study by Meade, et al, (
Brit Med J, 300:1431-37, 1990) which found chiropractic care to be more effective in the long term than hospital management (for chronic back pain sufferers only). Studies designed to test SMT against other modalities have consistently found that although SMT may produce more rapid relief there are no differences over the long term (for a review see
Clinical Orthopaedics & Related Research, 179:62-70, 1983). The Meade study did not test SMT against other modalities but merely compared hospital with chiropractic care in which a flock of modalities were employed. It did not even equalize the number of treatment sessions nor length of time under care. The most likely answer to this anomalous finding lies in patient satisfaction.
More…
http://www.ncahf.net/nl/1991/1-2.html
So, in essence, it doesn’t seem to be the interests of the public that the chiropractic profession is serving in the UK. Indeed, if chiropractors do end up gaining good access to the NHS’s patient bank, it could be bonanza time for them, not least because…
…the vast majority [95%] of UK chiropractors are interested in providing their services through the NHS, but only on a part-time basis and in a way that most closely resembles private practice.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/...ve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=11898015
Finally, it’s worth remembering that just because some chiropractors may appear to have dropped chiropractic’s subluxation-based nonsense, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they practice evidence-based manual therapy. They could still, quite easily, be duping patients into unnecessary or inappropriate treatment. For example, here’s what one well-known chiropractic marketing outfit offers its clients:
Chiropractic Simplified—Chiropractic described in 100 words without using the terms adjustment or subluxation. Use it in your patient conversations and see more people "get" chiropractic.
http://www.patientmedia.com/previewproducts/audio/seminar.htm
Scandalous.