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Join us in documenting the effects of spinal manipulative therapy on Asthma
Introduction
I
AM WRITING TO YOU to ask for your support for a multicenter clinical
trial by a highly qualified research team that will document the
effects of spinal manipulative therapy in the management of asthma
that we would like to fund. This particular study, at a cost of
approximately a quarter of a million dollars, is taking place in
Australia, known as the asthma capital of the world because of the
high rate of asthma in that country.
This
is the first time that a chiropractic research
investigation of this scale has emphasized the global symptoms
which we believe have more to do with the experience and prognosis
of asthma than any of the research investigations conducted thus
far.
Another
first This research undertaking will include an
appropriate control group of patients who will attend healthcare
centers but not receive chiropractic or any other type of contact
procedure during the 6-week intervention period.
Follow-up measurements
In other words, the most comprehensive spectrum to date of
indicators of asthma function will be tracked.
Over 17,000,000
Americans suffer from asthmatic symptoms, the number more than
doubling since 1988.
The disease is the leading cause of school absence in the United
States, with the prevalence rates in children under 5 years of age
increasing 160% from
1980-1994. [3]
Even more ominous is a recent report which suggests that in
early childhood the odds ratio for asthma occurrence increases
up to 4-fold with antibiotic use, the risk
apparently being dose-dependent. [4]
It concerns a condition
that, unlike back pain, is actually life-threatening and
thus has the potential to inflict tragedy upon every American
family;
It concerns a condition that expands the chiropractic
scope of practice to more current and realistic
boundaries, supported by years of case reports and preliminary
observations;
It answers the
methodological problems from the recent asthma trial which gained wide publicity through its publication in The New
England Journal of Medicine but is in fact a deeply flawed and
potentially misleading investigation;
It allows a research endeavor to go forward without further
delay in what is most likely a limited "window
of opportunity" for chiropractic to secure a viable place in the
healthcare market;
It represents an opportunity to make your voice heard
in our continuing effort to represent your profession with hard,
indisputable facts in today's competitive healthcare delivery system.
Wont
you help us fund this indispensable trial? Any amount will help!
Please join us at this extremely critical time as we direct our
healthcare system in the direction that will most efficiently, safely,
and economically affect us all.
Note:
References: 1 Balon J, et al.A Comparison of Active and Simulated Chiropractic Manipulation as Adjunctive Treatment for Childhood Asthma New England Journal of Medicine 1998; 339(15): 1013-1020 2Field T, Henteleff T, Hernandez-Reif M, Martinez E, Mavunda K, Kuhn C, Schanberg S. Children with asthma have improved pulmonary functions after massage therapy. Journal of Pediatrics 1998; 132(5): 854-858. 3The Integrative Medicine Consult 1999; 1(1): 120, 122. 4Wickens K, Pearce N, Crane J, Beasley R. Antibiotic use in early childhood and the development of asthma Clinical and Experimental Allergy 1999; 29: 766-771. 5Goldstein M [ed]: Monograph No. 15 The Research Status of Spinal Manipulative Therapy A Workshop held at the National Institutes of Health, February 2-4, 1975. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Washington, DC, February 3-4, 1975 6 Koes BW, Assendelft WJJ, van der Heijden GJMG, Bouter LM. Spinal manipulation for low-back pain: A updated systematic review of randomized clinical trials Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 1996 )Dec 15); 21 (24): 2860-2871. 7van Tulder M, Koes BW, Bouter LM. Conservative treatment of acute and chronic nonspecific low back pain: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of the most common interventions. Spine 1997;22(18): 2128-2156. 8Anderson R, Meeker WC, Wirick BE, Mootz RD, Kirk DH, Adams A. A meta-analysis of clinical trials of spinal manipulation. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics 1992; 15(3): 181-194. 9Shekelle PG, Adams AH, Chassin MR, Hurwitz EL, Brook RH. Spinal manipulation for low-back pain. Annals of Internal Medicine 1992; 117(9): 590-598. 10 Bigos S, Bowyer O, Braen G, et al. Acute Low Back Pain in Adults. Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. AHCPR Publication No. 95-0642. Rockville, MD: Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. December 1994. 11Manga P, Angus D, Papadopoulos C, Swan W. The Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Chiropractic Management of Low-Back Pain Ottawa, Ontario, CANADA: Pran Manga & Associates, Inc., University of Ottawa, 1993, pp 65-70. 12Rosen M. Back pain. Report of a Clinical Standards Advisory Group Committee on back pain. May 1994, London: HMSO. 13Commission on Alternative Medicine, Social Departementete, Legitimization for Vissa Kiropraktorer, Stockholm, SOU [English Summary] 1987; 12: 13-16. 14Danish Institute for Health Technology Assessment: Low-back pain, frequency, management, and prevention from an HTA perspective. Danish Health Technology Assessment 1999; 1(1). 15Thompson CJ. Second Report, Medicare Benefits Review Committee, Canberra, AUSTRALIA: Common wealth Government Printer, June 1986, Chapter 10 [Chiropractic]. 16Hasselberg PD. Chiropractic in New Zealand, Report of A Commission of Inquiry. Wellington, NEW ZEALAND: Government Printer, 1979. Return to ASTHMA |
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