Then please supply evidence from peer-reviewed websites to support your original assertion that “People come to chiropractors because they suffer from neck pain, headaches or low back pain. They have been doing this in increasing numbers”.
What's the point? It's evident what your *opinion* is, and I see no reason to discuss it further with someone who already has their mind set in stone. Also, it's not an important point. You will agree that LOTS of people seek care from DCs...in fact, that seems to be what motivates you to make the astounding number of postings you make all over the Net.
I believe we will all be better off if I present literature demonstrating how and why chiropractic is effective, superior to medical care FOR THE SAME CONDITION, and is vastly superior to pain medication. After all, that is the real issue at hand.
Get real. We’re talking about a half-hour conversation that took place in the days before hearing aids, and Harvey Lillard was at least 90% deaf
Thanks for the invitation, and the acknowledgement that Harvey Lillard WAS deaf before DD Palmer adjusted him.
Perhaps I have you confused with one of your forefathers, who maintain that Harvey was NOT deaf.
I have not seen the source you mention, but I suspect it would have taken LONGER to get his ideas across to a deaf person that it would have with you or I.
Then please provide evidence that conclusively demonstrates that chiropractic management reduces the incidence of serious NSAID complications, such as fatal gastrointestinal bleeding, and that it is more cost-effective than NSAIDS – all the while remembering that…
Finally, we get to the meat of the matter. First off, I am hamstrung because I am not (yet) permitted to post links (urls) to my materials, and that puts the onus on anyone who wants to review these materials to have to do the leg-work for themselves.
HOWEVER, it is easy to locate these materials on GOOGLE by
putting quotation marks around the titles of these articles, when you paste them into the search box. I hope that you will, because the following materials are quite revealing.
This first section will address the evidence that spinal manipulation is AT LEAST as effective as pain medication for reduction of neuro-musculo-skeletal (NMS) pain.
Later sections will document that manipulation is MORE THAN an expensive aspirin (which wears off quickly). I think any reasonable person (evidence-based addict or not) would agree that any treatment (and I am referring to chiropractic care) that provided SIGNIFICANT PAIN RELIEF for weeks or months is CERTAINLY preferable to taking pain pills, with their documented risks, including death.
1.
Chronic Pain in Persons With Neuromuscular Disease
Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation 2005 (Jun); 86 (6): 1155–1163 ~ FULL TEXT
The first study I’d like to draw your attention to is a paper published in the Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation (2005). Although this study is not specific to neck pain per-se, the results, published by several M.D.s and a Ph.D. from the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine is still most interesting.
Questionnaires were given to several hundred recruited patients who experienced severe neuro-musculo-skeletal (NMS) pain. The researchers used a broad selection of assessment tools, including Pain presence or absence, pain severity, pain quality (Neuropathic Pain Scale), pain interference (Brief Pain Inventory), pain site, quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey [SF-36]), and the form of pain treatment used by the patient. Very extensive!
The following table tabulates the type of treatment each patient used, followed by the average pain relief they experienced from that treatment. It’s rated on a classical 1-10 scale, with 1 meaning little or no relief, and 10 suggesting complete pain relief. The results are quite staggering:
Pain treatment -------------- Average Pain Relief
Chiropractic manipulation ---------
7.33 ±3.78
Nerve blocks ---------------------
6.75 ±4.76
Narcotics ------------------------
6.37 ±2.74
Muscle relaxants -----------------
5.78 ±2.88
Massage ------------------------
5.48 ±2.73
Acupuncture --------------------
5.29 ±3.22
Ibuprofen, aspirin ----------------
5.22 ±2.83
Physical therapy ------------ ----
4.45 ±2.66
Acetaminophen ------------ -----
4.11 ±2.93
It may be hard for organized medicine to swallow, but this study revealed that chiropractic care was more effective for pain relief than nerve blocks, opioid analgesics , muscle relaxants, physical therapy, or acetaminophen (in that order). That’s pretty powerful stuff, isn’t it?
I have great respect for these authors because,
even though the results were not very complementary to standard medical treatment (pain pills, muscle relaxants and physical therapy),
they published the article anyway.
Who’s to say how many other similar studies may never have made it to publication because they contained comparable findings?
2.
Upper Cervical Manipulation Combined with Mobilization for the Treatment of Atlantoaxial Osteoarthritis: A Report of 10 Cases
J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2011 (Feb); 34 (2): 131-137
This new case series, managed by the Department of Orthopedics, in the General Military Hospital of Beijing, China, involved 10 patients with idiopathic degenerative and posttraumatic atlantoaxial osteoarthritis. They were treated with upper cervical chiropractic adjusting, in combination with mobilization device therapy.
Outcome measures included self-reported pain using a numeric pain scale (NPS) (1-10, with 0 is no pain and 10 is the worst possible pain), physical examination findings, and radiologic changes.
The reported results were quite impressive:
- Pre to post pain findings included a reduction of pain from 8.6 to 2.6
- Rotation of C1 upon C2 increased from 28° to 52°, effectively doubling upper cervical range of motion.
- Restoration of joint space was observed in 6 patients
- Clinical improvement was rated as “good” to “excellent” by 80% of these patients!
3.
Health Maintenance Care in Work-Related Low Back Pain and Its Association With Disability Recurrence
Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2011 (Apr); 53 (4): 396–404
This study is unique in that it was conducted by the Center for Disability Research at the Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety and the University of Massachusetts Lowell, Hopkinton, Mass; and the Center for Health Economics & Science Policy at United BioSource Corporation, London, United Kingdom.
Their objective was to compare the occurrences of repeated disability episodes between types of health care providers, who treat claimants with new episodes of work-related low back pain (LBP). They followed
894 patients over 1-year, using workers’ compensation claims data.
By controlling for demographics and severity, they determined the hazard ratio (HR) for disability recurrence between 3 types of providers:
-- Physical Therapists (PT),
-- Physicians (MD), and
-- Chiropractors (DC).
The disability recurrence rates were:
Statistically, this means
you are twice as likely to end up disabled if you got your care from a PT, rather than from a DC.
You’re also
60% more likely to be disabled if you choose an MD to manage your care, rather than a DC. Isn't that an eye-opener?
The authors concluded: “
In work-related nonspecific LBP, the use of health maintenance care provided by physical therapist or physician services was associated with a higher disability recurrence than with chiropractic services or no treatment.”
<HR>
Because I can't provide links to these materials, it is way too time consuming, pasting all this in here. Please consider reviewing the numerous articles on our blog at Chiro dot Org
Professor Ernst cites more than enough evidence to compel chiropractors to adopt a cautious attitude towards neck manipulation. IMO, it is wholly unethical that many chiropractors condemn the accumulating evidence for neck manipulation causing stroke as anecdotal when, in many cases, it’s exactly that sort of evidence that they rely on to promote their services – i.e. many chiropractors, as well as their regulators and professional associations, seem to find it acceptable to promote anecdotal or weak evidence where it supports chiropractic treatment, but where similar, or more robust, evidence suggests that serious complications (e.g. stroke) can result from it, they are known to be quick to dismiss it.
Blue Man, you make false statements when you say: "it is wholly unethical that many chiropractors condemn the accumulating evidence for neck manipulation causing stroke" BECAUSE there is NO EVIDENCE. Evidence is when you can prove something causes something else.
Have you heard of Salon Stroke, or Bow Hunter's Stroke? It is well-known that people have strokes following such trivial events as backing their car out of the driveway, or after sneezing.
To put it bluntly...if Salon owners had to carry malpractice insurance, and someone (like you) started making *big noises* in the media about the terrible dangers of having your hair washed at the Salon, don't you think there would be LOTS litigation? But...
would that PROVE that Salons cause stroke? Deep pockets draw them like flies, and bottom-feeders are happy to take their case, for the usual 40% share of the take.
Litigation is not PROOF of causation, so your endless mention of another court case is STILL NOT PROOF OF CAUSATION.
So...why you choose to focus on chiropractors when there are plenty of documented cases of stroke following hair-washing? Inquiring minds want to know?
If you are really so outraged at the fact that people get strokes, why don't you review stroke in general, rather than focusing solely on chiropractors? Something about your specific focus smells funny to me.
I think you need to get up to speed with the data:
Quote:
"A recent article by researchers from the Anglo-European College of Chiropractic in Bournemouth started with the telling statement that "the risk associated with cervical manipulation is controversial". This is certainly true…The Bournemouth team sent questionnaires about risk-related issues to 200 randomly selected UK chiropractors and received 92 responses. Their results show, among other things, that "only 45% indicated they always discuss [the risks of cervical manipulation] with patients ... " In plain language, this means that the majority of UK chiropractors seem to violate the most basic ethical standards in healthcare. If we assume that the 92 responders were from the more ethical end of the chiropractic spectrum, it might even be the vast majority of UK chiropractors who are violating the axiom of informed
A review of virtually ALL the stroke literature on my "Stroke and Chiropractic" page suggests that the odds of anyone having a stroke following chiropractic care is between 1:500,000 to 0:5,000,000, depending on which author you choose to quote.
Personally, I will never get to adjust a half-million people, and the odds of my ever being involved as a litigant because someone had a stroke proximal to visiting me in my office is effectively ZERO. I have been in practice 16 years so far.
So, why should I quote unfounded speculation to patients as fact?
Perhaps you need to review these articles:
Inappropriate Use of the Title Chiropractor and the Term Chiropractic Manipulation in the Peer-reviewed Biomedical Literature
Chiropractic & Osteopathy 2006 (Aug 22); 14 (1): 16 ~ FULL TEXT
Misuse of the Literature by Medical Authors in Discussing Spinal Manipulative Therapy Injury
J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1995 (May); 18 (4): 203–210
because both these articles clearly document that MANY of the articles citing stroke-following-manipulation by a DC turn out to be following manipulation by untrained providers like MDs, PTs and even Barbers.
The most obnoxious example is this article:
Vertebral Artery Dissections After Chiropractic Neck Manipulation in Germany Over Three Years
J Neurol. 2006 Jun; 253 (6): 724-30. Epub 2006 Mar 6.
The abstract of this article blatantly conceals the facts stated within the body of the paper when it states that “
we describe 36 patients with vertebral artery dissections and prior chiropractic neck manipulation”.
When I read that sentence, I am led to believe that “
real-live chiropractors” (meaning licensed Doctors of Chiropractic, who received their training at a CCE/WCCE accredited schools)
were the ones to provide the “chiropractic neck manipulation”. Unfortunately, that couldn't be further from the truth! Look at the table from this article:
The Debilitating Maneuver Was Conducted By:
Orthopedic Surgeons n=18 (50%)
Physiotherapists n= 5 (14%)
Chiropractors n= 4 (11%)
GP (Medical Doctors) n= 2 (6%)
Neurologist n= 1 (3%)
Homeopath n= 1 (3%)
"Unknown" n= 3 (9%)
Total Injuries n= 36 (100%)
So, in Germany at least, it appears that Orthopedic Surgeons are killing people with chiropractic, followed closely by PTs.
Where is your outrage, Blue Man?
And what angers me is that people like you cite mis-information articles like this to their unsuspecting readers ALL THE TIME
I have repeatedly asked what your training was, what your stake is, and why you continue to peddle drivel and innuendo-as-fact on lists like this. This is NOT AN ATTACK.
That's a genuine and fair question, posed by one of the doctors you gleefully suggest is "wholly unethical".
Originally Posted by DrFrankmeister View Post
If I sneeze and there is a car accident across the street, where is the causality?
Once again, get real. We’re talking about plausibility.
Ahhh...now you have devolved from *evidence* to mere *plausibility*.
Well, 2 can play that game.
1. It's *plausible* that MARKET SHARE is the cause for publishing mis-leasing articles like
Vertebral Artery Dissections After Chiropractic Neck Manipulation in Germany Over Three Years
J Neurol. 2006 Jun; 253 (6): 724-30. Epub 2006 Mar 6.
- Managed Care has decimated medical incomes.
- Organized Medicine has a long history of trying to destroy ANY profession they consider as poaching on their turf.
- They were found guilty TWICE of lying, and attempting to destroy my profession for solely financial reasons.
2.
It's *plausible* that Organized Medicine learned their lesson in Federal Court, and now financially supports lackeys and incompetent failed doctors to continue undermining alt-med in general and chiropractic in particular on websites just like yours, Blue Man.
So, for transparency sake, why don't you tell us a little about yourself. The choice is, of course, completely up to you, but I say your CREDIBILITY is on the line, and side-stepping this issue will cost you *believers* in the long run.