But here is a quote from one of Joe Ierano's websites
http://www.chiropracticierano.com.au/diff/what.html
Quote:
We do not treat diseases like colic or multiple sclerosis...we strengthen the structural system of the body to give some relief.
Apparently to give some relief is not to treat!
But how can it make any difference? Claiming that chiropractic can give some relief to (as opposed to treat) MS sufferers doesn't absolve him from requiring evidence to back up that claim.
This has become the standard mantra, or battle-cry perhaps, of chiropractic and the alt-med industry in general. Fuelled in part, I suspect, by the fact that therapeutic claims tend to get noticed, reported and dealt with. In the case of claims by those providing treatment, I suspect the HCCC (NSW only?) or ACCC are the ones to take an interest whilst the advertising of products can be dealt with by the TGA (in Australia, that is).
Here's what the Chiropractors' Association of Australia had to say in response to a Lateline program earlier this year...
It is important to realise that chiropractic doesn't "treat" any condition, pain or symptom. Chiropractic care reduces interferences to the body's ability to function optimally, and works to restore complete normal function. Chiropractors fundamentally see themselves as diagnosing and taking care of patients with dysfunctions in the neuromusculoskeletal system, including the spine and joints.
I'd suggest there's an apparent attempt to redifine what "treatment" is in this disclaimer. In a medical sense, according to dictionary.com, the appropriate definition of "treat" is...
* 3 - to deal with (a disease, patient, etc.) in order to relieve or cure.
So, based on that definition, if you "deal with" a "patient" in order to "relieve or cure", then you're treating.
I've said it before and I'll say it again - if cracking backs in the hope that colic might happen to respond positively isn't treatment, then what does constitute treatment? Putting a broken limb in plaster isn't treatment since the bone heals itself. Replacing a heart or lung isn't treatment since, once you've finished messing about with all that mechanical stuff like cutting and stitching, the body has to do all the healing. Antibiotics don't treat, they just kill some bugs so the immune system can get the body on the road to recovery.
And if they aren't cracking backs in the explicit hope of relieving colic, asthma, otitis, etc, then how do they explain their intervention to the customer who comes in looking for relief from those very complaints?
If we took alt-med's definition of "treat", the word would become redundant.
I
covered this and other weasel words in a lengthy blog post a while back.
I wonder if Joe Ierano saw the issue of Cosmos magazine, an Australian science mag, that carried the very same Simon Singh article as the Oz Skeptics published?