CHIROPRACTIC IDENTITY: A NEUROLOGICAL, PROFESSIONAL, AND POLITICAL ASSESSMENT
 
   

Chiropractic Identity:
A Neurological, Professional, and Political Assessment

This section is compiled by Frank M. Painter, D.C.
Send all comments or additions to:
   Frankp@chiro.org
 
   

FROM:   J Chiropractic Humanities 2016 (Dec); 23 (1): 35–45 ~ FULL TEXT

  OPEN ACCESS   


Anthony L. Rosner, PhD, LLD (Hon)

Private Practice,
Watertown, MA


Objective   The purpose of this article is to propose a focused assessment of the identity of chiropractic and its profession, triangulating multiple viewpoints converging upon various aspects and definitions of neurology, manual medicine, and alternative or mainstream medicine.

Discussion   Over 120 years since its inception, chiropractic has struggled to achieve an identity for which its foundations could provide optimal health care. Despite recognition of the benefits of spinal manipulation in various government guidelines, advances in US military and Veterans Administration, and persistently high levels of patient satisfaction, the chiropractic profession remains underrepresented in most discussions of health care delivery. Distinguishing characteristics of doctors of chiropractic include the following:

(1)   they embrace a model of holistic, preventive medicine (wellness);

(2)   they embrace a concept of neurological imbalance in which form follows function,
        disease follows disturbed biochemistry, and phenomenology follows physiology;

(3)   they diagnose, and their institutions of training are accredited by a body recognized
        by the US Department of Education;

(4)   they manage patients on a first-contact basis, often as primary care providers in
        geographical areas that are underserved;

(5)   the spine is their primary — but not exclusive — area of interaction;

(6)   they deliver high-velocity, low-amplitude adjustments with a superior safety record
        compared with other professions; and

(7)   they use a network of institutions worldwide that have shown increasing
        commitments to research.

Conclusion   This article provides an overview of chiroractic identity from 6 points of view:

(1)   concepts of manual medicine;
(2)   areas of interest beyond the spine;
(3)   concepts of the chiropractic subluxation;
(4)   concepts of neurology;
(5)   concepts of mainstream or alternative health care; and
(6)   concepts of primary care, first-contact provider, or specialist.

Key indexing terms:   Manipulation, Spinal, Neurology, Chiropractic, Complementary Therapies, History, 20th Century



From the Full-Text Article:

Introduction

From its origins in 1895 with DD Palmer’s original focus on magnetic healing,1 chiropractic identity has been beset with the challenging task of keeping up not only with clinical and scientific observation but with political trade winds involving public perception and the marketplace of health care.

Originally, DD Palmer viewed the body from a more mechanical viewpoint, like a machine, for at the turn of the 20th century he indicated that:

“A human being is a human machine and, like a machine, would run smoothly, without any friction, if every part was in its proper place. If every bone, nerve, and all blood vessels, muscles, etc., were just right, there would be nothing wrong. A Chiropractic looks the human machine over, and finds what parts are out of place, why the blood does not circulate freely to all parts, why the nerves cry out with pain. Disease is the effect or result of some part of the body being disarranged. To put them in their proper place, would give the diseased person ease, and allow Nature to rebuild without being obstructed". [1]


With that in mind, DD Palmer paid particular attention to the nerves:

“The human body is a bundle of fine sensitive nerves, passing over, under, and between the two hundred bones and many muscles and ligaments. These nerves are liable to be pinched, strained, stretched, or pulled out of place by the displacement of any one of the bones, muscles or ligaments, causing any of the many nerve diseases.” [1]


It was from this origin that the popular but often misinterpreted concept grew that doctors of chiropractic dealt with “bones out of place,” the locus of such derangements being the spine.

Wrestling with what would become a perennial question of chiropractic identity nearly a century later, the World Federation of Chiropractic (WFC) organized 2 years of workshops, driven in part by a survey conducted by Manifest Communications that emphasized what had become a disparity between what the public and doctors of chiropractic commonly perceived as chiropractic treatment. By a wide margin, the survey and various studies suggested that doctors of chiropractic were managing primarily musculoskeletal problems with emphasis upon back pain. [2–5]

Taking these findings to the WFC Congress in Sydney, Australia, in June of 2005,
the Identity Consultation Task Force concluded the following:
  1. It is important for the profession to have an identity;

  2. most agree that the chiropractic profession suffers from an unclear identity and position within today’s health care plans; and

  3. it is important to understand how doctors of chiropractic think that the profession should be viewed and how they believe that it is actually viewed.

Here one finds substantial discrepancies:
  1. whether the profession offers primary or specialist health care;

  2. whether the profession is mainstream (ie, core to the health care delivery system) or if it is an alternative; and

  3. whether the profession offers wellness and nonsurgical, nondrug health care or simply manages back, neck, and spinal problems.

The final Identity Consultation Task Force Final Report that emerged from the 2005
WFC Conference
  [2] concluded that a leading statement of identity was to be:

“…established and maintained through the use of the following three linked concepts:

  1. A leading statement on identity, which must be clear, concise, and immediately relevant to both the public and the profession — the ‘pole’ (brand platform).

  2. Several important qualifying statements, which provide the necessary context and foundation for the pole — the ‘ground’ (brand pillars).

  3. A description of the qualities or essential personality of chiropractors — the ‘personality’ (tone).”


The “pole” was that doctors of chiropractic should be regarded as

      “the spinal health care experts in the health care system.”


The ground statements emphasized
  1. a patient-centered approach to health care;

  2. wellness;

  3. the self-healing powers of the individual;

  4. avoidance of the use of drugs and surgery wherever possible;

  5. examination, diagnosis, and treatment based upon available research;
    and perhaps the most critical element of all,

  6. the relationship between the spine and the nervous system. [3]

In adopting these identity statements by consensus, the WFC Conference clearly identified the spine as an element, without which most perceptions of chiropractic were assumed to wither away, wiping out chiropractic’s identity in the process. This raised the question of whether the public would now regard the profession as a specialist form of health care delivery and fail to perceive the spine as a dynamic entity that is hard-wired into the nervous system, such that the latter network and actual scope of practice of the profession would be overlooked. In other words, there would be a repudiation of the framework with which chiropractic needed to be regarded as expressed by none other than DD Palmer:

“Life is the expression of tone. In that sentence is the basic principle of chiropractic. Tone is the normal degree of nerve tension. Tone is the expression in function by normal elasticity, activity, strength and excitability of the various organs as observed in a state of health.” [6]


As Joseph Brimhall, President of the Council of Chiropractic Education and Director of the Council of Chiropractic Education International, explained, there was no wording in the accreditation standards of the Council of Chiropractic Education (US), the Model Standards of Council of Chiropractic Education International, or other jurisdictions that restricted the chiropractic profession to the spine. [7]

Adding fuel to these fires of unrest are 2 major questions, 1 philosophical and 1 as to whether the chiropractic profession is based upon the chiropractic subluxation (including a meaningful definition of the latter) and should offer limited prescriptions, given that the medical profession has shown in several instances to be deficient in understanding and especially diagnosing a variety of musculoskeletal conditions. [8–11]

Chiropractic’s identity thus remains, at best, a work in progress and, at worst, a matter of considerable controversy. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to address this dilemma through discussion of the following 6 topics:

  1. concepts of manual medicine;

  2. areas of interest beyond the spine;

  3. concepts of neurology;

  4. concepts of the chiropractic subluxation;

  5. mainstream or alternative; and

  6. primary care, first-contact provider, or specialist.





Concepts of Manual Medicine

Chiropractic occupies 1 niche in the broad field of physical or manual medicine that spans soft tissue, mobilization, and manipulation techniques. [12–16]   Included in the manual medicine portfolio are such interventions as osteopathic manipulative medicine, massage, physical therapy, McKenzie method, craniosacral therapy, myofascial release, Rolfing structural integration, Qigong, Shiatsu, and even acupressure. [17]

Although chiropractic has attempted to define its niche in spinal manipulation using short-lever, high-velocity, low-amplitude (HVLA) techniques, [18] those approaches are not fully circumscribed by doctors of chiropractic alone. The challenge becomes even greater when one attempts to reconcile the nearly 100 named chiropractic techniques that have been identified by Bergmann. [19]   From such an expanded catalog, it is apparent that a vast array of low-velocity, soft-tissue, and even instrumental techniques are included, which speak to an extensive overlap with other branches of manual medicine.

Craniosacral therapy and myofascial release, for example, are commonly practiced by osteopathic manipulative therapists. [20]   And HVLA manipulations, which traditionally have been associated with doctors of chiropractic, have also been applied by osteopaths, [21] physical therapists, German medical therapists, and practitioners of Chinese medicine. [21, 22]   Part of the identity problem is that doctors of chiropractic are often included with other practitioners.

However, the literature shows an inferior safety record with the other professions and laypeople having had lesser training and/or displayed less competence in musculoskeletal medicine. [23–25]   The superior safety record of doctors of chiropractic compared with other manual therapists clearly stands out as a distinguishing characteristic of chiropractic. [26]   The safety of the HVLA procedures delivered by doctors of chiropractic has been shown to be greater than what has been encountered in medical procedures. [27, 28]   In addition, many of the soft tissue techniques applied by doctors of chiropractic could be conflated with approaches used by massage therapists. Therefore, on the basis of overlap with such a broad array of techniques applied by all the above-named practitioners, it would be unproductive to define chiropractic on the basis of manual techniques alone.




Areas of Interest Beyond the Spine

The historical record and majority of rigorous research — as well as the aforementioned Identity Consultation Task Force [2] — has focused upon the spine as the most successful area of intervention with which doctors of chiropractic are identified.

Nevertheless, alternatives in addition to the spine in which the usefulness of chiropractic care
has been documented include the following:

  1. Extremities:   the successful outcomes regarding chiropractic treatments of the extremities, supported by a body of literature which suggests effective outcomes in managing repetitive motion disorders. [29–32]

  2. Neck muscles:   published reports of chiropractic effleurage of the sternocleidomastoid muscles, proposed to be an effective part of the chiropractic management of otitis media. [33]

  3. Skull:   the successful applications of craniosacral therapy, reported by the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners to have been practiced by 38.0% of doctors of chiropractic in 2003 [34] and focusing upon the skull as well as the vertebral canal. [35]

  4. Neck muscles:   the application of myofascial release, also known as ischemic compression, directed in at least 1 study to the active upper trapezius trigger points with a successful outcome. [36]

  5. Temporomandibular joint:   chiropractic treatment of temporomandibular disorders, necessarily involving applications to areas of the jaw and sides of the neck, for which a fair level of supporting evidence of effectiveness has been reported. [37]

  6. Hip and knee:   chiropractic management of osteoarthritis of the hip [38] and knee, [39] for which supportive evidence of efficacy has recently been emerging.

  7. Muscles:   chiropractic testing of muscle function in all parts of the body is 1 application (applied kinesiology), reported by the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners to have been practiced by 37.6% of doctors of chiropractic in 2003 [25] and involving muscles throughout the entire body.

  8. Nutrition:   nutrition and wellness, major components of health maintenance and prevention, often advocated by doctors of chiropractic. In fact, the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners found in 2003 that more than 96% of the chiropractic profession in America engaged in instructing their patients in health and wellness. [25]

Thus, it is awkward to consider chiropractic interventions to be limited to the spine.   The forgoing body of literature shows that treatment limited to the spine should not be considered to be the sole lens through which chiropractic is viewed. Applications by doctors of chiropractic to other regions of the body have demonstrated clinical effectiveness and should not be categorically dismissed.




Concepts of Chiropractic Subluxation

Identity of chiropractic has been intimately associated with the chiropractic subluxation [40, 41], a topic of considerable debate within itself.   As defined by the Association of Chiropractic Colleges in July 1996 and the subject of texts that have been considered to be definitive, [42] the chiropractic subluxation was regarded to be:

“… a complex of functional and/or structural and/or pathological articular changes that compromise neural integrity and may influence organ system function and general health.” [43]


Historically, definitions of chiropractic subluxation that presented the term in 3 dimensions were beset
by a number of challenges
  [44–46]:

  1. In terms of misalignments, it was clear that these could not be detectable by technological methods existing at that time.

  2. In terms of aberration of movement integrity, either deficient or excessive motion, reliable measurements of motion remained elusive.

  3. In terms of physiologic dysfunction, these could be present with or without pain and could facilitate one’s understanding of chiropractic subluxations. But simply presenting a clinical complaint as a physiological dysfunction was essentially a circular argument, begging the question and demanding further clarification.

Therefore, the question has remained whether the chiropractic subluxation could be shown as a clinical reality by objective measurements, in addition to what its attributes really were. Capturing the proper definition of chiropractic subluxation is a goal that nobody could dispute. Fortuitously, it is the emergence of research with an eye toward systemic and arguably nonmuscular domains responding to spinal manipulation that could be credited with a new, progressive recasting of the chiropractic definition of chiropractic subluxation appearing in the fourth edition of the Clinical Practice Guidelines (2013) issued by the Council on Chiropractic Practice which reads [47]:

“Subluxation is a neurological imbalance or distortion in the body associated with adverse physiological responses and/or structural changes, which may become persistent or progressive. The most frequent site for the chiropractic correction of the subluxation is via the vertebral column.”


This groundbreaking concept meant that the term neurological imbalance had now emerged into public view, taking precedent over so many of the hidebound terms that used to be grounded in segmental, articular, or vertebral terms from the 1930s for at least 60 years. [41]   To what may we attribute this audacious (if not auspicious) turn of events? The Council on Chiropractic Practice itself has stated [33] that “the change in the definition represents the Board’s analysis and research into the continued evidence supporting spinal adjustment of dysfunctional vertebra leading to brain metabolic [48] and transient cortical plastic changes in the brain and nervous system.” [49]

A few more outstanding chapters in research that have paved the way toward this dramatic revision
of the chiropractic subluxation’s definition are worth citing:


  1. The finding that spinal manipulation at the C5/C6 spinal segment is regionally related to the infraspinatus but not gluteus medius muscle, suggesting in the authors’ own words that “the primary physiological effect of SMT may be neurological rather than changed joint mechanics (italics mine).” [50]

  2. The dramatic observation by Karason and Drysdale [51] that an HVLA thrust at the lumbosacral junction produced a significant increase in cutaneous blood flow over the L5 dermatome in nonsmokers but not smokers, suggesting the role of a nicotine-sensitive receptor or other trigger.

  3. The award-winning research of Song and his coworkers [52] at Parker College, demonstrating a broad spectrum of anti-inflammatory, joint-specific effects of Activator treatments in a rat model encompassing behavioral, cytological, and neurophysiological benchmarks.

  4. The demonstration that a bilateral hypothenar type adjustment accompanied by audible cavitation specifically produced a decrease in the production of the inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor–α and interleukin-1β in human subjects. [53]

  5. The revelation that 2 patients with cervicogenic headache after 4 weeks of manipulative therapy posted reductions of tumor necrosis factor–α exceeding 50%. [54]

  6. Continuing with observations regarding the inflammatory cytokines, the observation that the direction of strain in cultured fibroblasts determined the levels of specific cytokines produced, raising the practical concern that the effects of manipulation may vary in patients depending upon tissue strain directions. [55]

  7. Two of the outstanding colic studies, 1 of only 2 areas of pediatric chiropractic care supported by clinical trials and possibly involving nonmusculoskeletal mechanisms, demonstrating that manipulation rapidly produced significant reductions of this disorder. [56, 57]

  8. The finding that cervical spine manipulation not only altered cortical integration of dual somatosensory input but also changed the way the central nervous system responded to a subsequent motor training (typing) task. [58]

All these findings defined objective physical attributes that could be attributed to what one referred to as the chiropractic subluxation and how chiropractic interventions attenuated this disorder. These concepts suggest a nonmusculoskeletal, systemic disorder that involved neurological function.

These discoveries and the resulting redefinition of the chiropractic subluxation did not exist at the turn of the century in 2000. Casting the chiropractic subluxation in light of these systemic changes brings this discussion back to the original concept of DD Palmer, identifying chiropractic’s primary target as the nervous system as quoted above. [7] It also leads directly to the following topic.




Concepts of Neurology

Table 1A

Table 1B

Elaborating upon DD Palmer’s manifesto, the link between the systemic effects (anti-inflammatory, somatosensory, behavioral, and cytological) and spinal manipulation is best understood in terms of neurology. An appreciation of this approach begins with a consideration of numerous animal studies as shown in Table 1.

These demonstrate that a variety of physiological effects (a) are distinct from pain and (b) extend far from the area of stimulation. With several of these investigations demonstrating that nerve conductivity is specifically affected, [72–74] it can be construed that the nervous system provides an essential link between the experimentally produced aberrations and the physiological changes observed.

Thus, a wide range of stimuli are capable of producing physiological responses, providing a much broader canvas with which chiropractic subluxations and, for that matter, chiropractic identity can be represented in experimental research, again placing the nervous system at the center.

With regard to changes in neural function in response to manipulation, however, a few observations can be brought to light: In their different approaches, all demonstrate inductions of activities within the nervous system that project responses to manipulation well beyond the area of contact.

  1. Abnormal somatosensory evoked potentials from the paraspinal musculature were found to be correlating with decreased pain responses after lumbar manipulation, possibly due to a central effect of sensory processing. [75]

  2. In a cohort of 12 subjects with a history of recurrent neck stiffness and/or neck pain but no acute symptoms at the time of study, a single session of cervical spine manipulation revealed a significant decrease in the amplitude of 2 components of somatosensory evoked potentials, lasting 20 minutes following the intervention. The implication was that cervical spine manipulation may alter cortical somatosensory processing and sensorimotor integration, shedding light upon the mechanisms for the relief of pain and restoration of functional mobility which are the most widely observed outcomes to treatment by spinal manipulation. [76]

  3. In subjects subjected to side-posture manipulation, both Hoffman reflex and M-wave responses displayed the greatest attenuation with actual manipulation—as opposed to a positioning maneuver. [77]

  4. Following sacroiliac joint manipulation, there was a decreased inhibitory effect of knee joint pathology on quadriceps muscle activity, suggesting an interaction between spinal manipulation and the inhibition of voluntary activities produced by pain. [78]

  5. Power spectrum analyses of patient electrocardiograms suggested alterations of sympathetic and parasympathetic activity produced by spinal manipulation. [79–81]

  6. More recently, in 36 subjects with identifiable myofascial pain syndrome in the infraspinatus and gluteus medius muscles, spinal manipulation at the C5/C6 spinal segment significantly reduced the pressure-pain threshold in the infraspinatus muscle but not the gluteus medius. There was no decrease in either muscle in the sham-treated group. The implication was that the primary physiological effect of spinal manipulation may be neurophysiological rather than changed joint mechanics, in which spinal manipulation produces inhibitory mechanisms in the myofascial tissues. [36]

These observations point toward a model of physiological activity in which form follows function. In so doing, it is useful to frame chiropractic in terms of functional neurology, a term in keeping with the more progressive definition of chiropractic subluxation and thus more amenable to interpretation, discussion, and ultimate acceptance by both other health care professions and the public. The cachet and impact of functional neurology can be illustrated by the formation of such professional societies as the International Association of Functional Neurology and Rehabilitation and the massive Society for Neuroscience. I had the pleasure of presenting research at the Society for Neuroscience Convention in New Orleans in 2012 [82] and found my discussions and presentation on functional neurology widely and warmly received. These are both organizations which have much to offer chiropractic and vice versa and which I believe would both solidify and promote evolving concepts of chiropractic identity.

These examples lead to a vindication of DD Palmer’s original concept of the importance of “tone,” [8] an affirmation of the significance of the nervous system as a core element of what chiropractic has attempted to address. Neither the disorder nor the intervention is necessarily confined to a local site, but rather the consequences of the disorder and the therapeutic applications involve systemic effects that could be triggered by the nervous system.




Mainstream or Alternative

A final aspect of establishing an identity of chiropractic addresses the question of whether this discipline needs to be considered a mainstream or alternative branch of health care delivery. Assumptions have been that mainstream status confers battle-tested, scientific validity as opposed to an alternative, the latter sometimes categorized as keeping bad company with, for example, purveyors of laetrile.   At the same time, mainstream status may confine chiropractic to a low back or neck role by downplaying interventions outside of these regions. In addition, this recognition ignores the fact that, 35 years ago, little research existed to support what would now be considered mainstream status for chiropractic care for low back pain.

In other words, those concluding that chiropractic should be considered only as a mainstream venue would be attaching such strings as “back specialists” or “musculoskeletal pain relievers” to this classification, overlooking the research and interventions that suggest the potential for chiropractic to transcend these boundaries.

Answers to address if chiropractic is mainstream or alternative are best generated by first examining what are varying concepts of alternative medicine.   The German nicht-schulmedizine model considers alternative medicine as all health care practices not taught at university medical facilities or medical schools. More facetiously, health policy fanatics sometimes refer to alternative medicine as those health care practices that are not paid for by insurance and which a patient does not tell his or her primary doctor. This takes after the findings of David Eisenberg which represent the emergence of alternative medicine into national consciousness. [83]   But perhaps the most telling is an opinion voiced by what was the forerunner of the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health; that is, alternative medicine represents any health care practice that is not politically dominant at the time.

The debate over alternative medicine was best represented by the opposing viewpoints of Andrew Weil [84]:

“Patients in unprecedented numbers are going outside of conventional medicine to look for help. Why are people doing this? Clearly, there is dissatisfaction with conventional medicine.… The therapies that we aim for are those that are reasonable, that are supported by what evidence is now available, that above all are not harmful, and that work from the premise that the body can heal itself, if you give it a chance.”


and Arnold Relman [85]:

“Most alternative systems of treatment are based on irrational or fanciful thinking … it [alternative medicine] could not be woven in to the fabric of the medical curriculum without confusion, contradiction, and an undermining of the scientific foundation upon which modern medicine rests.”


However, the authoritative Health and Medicine Division of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (formerly known as the Institute of Medicine) has concluded in an exhaustive review that revered medical evidence is lacking and in need of substantial improvement. [85]   In fact, in 1 study comparing the extent to which different medical specialties were evidence based, chiropractic practice was found to have the highest proportion of care (68.3%) supported by good quality, experimental evidence and was superior to several medical subspecialties. [86]   Add to this a recent study of 2500 medical treatments in which only 15% were identified as being beneficial, 22% likely to be beneficial, and 47% unknown, [87] and the question arises whether the mainstream medical foundation is as commanding as it has commonly been made out to be.

In short, despite its clear prominence in terms of public perception and third-party payers, mainstream status is not without its flaws. Chiropractic, in its rush to achieve singular distinction and to seize mainstream ground in which most of the training, research, and public awareness have taken place (centering around the spine and musculoskeletal care), may have compromised its future. The profession runs the risk of mortgaging many of its traditional and hard-won attributes. These would include the very foundations of chiropractic, such as
  1. the ability to diagnose;

  2. patient-centered care [88];

  3. primary wellness care in offering an alternative to the current medical paradigm [89]; and

  4. numerous research findings already published representing the full range of basic research, randomized clinical trials, and case series—all of which point toward a scope of practice and model of patient care which extend well beyond the specialist role of simply managing back and neck pain.

In looking ahead and allowing room to expand into those areas in which there is merit, some of chiropractic’s leading researchers have declared that there is reason to devote future research efforts beyond the spine and spinal conditions (ie, low back and neck pain). [90]   For these reasons, alternative medicine offers the proper niche into which chiropractic may continue to evolve and express its full potential.

Yet there is no denying that, for managing low back and neck pain as well as headache, chiropractic has already achieved “mainstream” status as well.   There are more 100 published clinical trials in scientific journals to support this claim, as well as the public perception that doctors of chiropractic do, in fact, know more than a little about the spine and spinal health. [72, 73, 91–95]

For these reasons, chiropractic needs to be considered a hybrid of both alternative and mainstream medicine:   mainstream, based upon what it has attained, and alternative, in areas in which its documented growth has occurred and must continue to occur.




Primary Care, First-Contact Provider, or Specialist

Like alternative medicine, multiple definitions have been provided for primary care that are worth reviewing:

  1. Starfield:   first-contact, longitudinal, coordinated, and comprehensive care (ie, practitioner should take care of the majority of problems without referral). [96]

  2. Public Health Service Act:   services which require family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology, dentistry, or mental health as provided by physicians or other health care professionals. [97]

  3. Institute of Medicine:   emphasis upon accessibility, comprehensiveness, continuity, and coordination. [98]


Notably, in primary care, nobody trains in that specific domain.   Primary care is a way of delivering health care, not a body of knowledge as such.   It is more characterized by the organization of care rather than practitioner type.   [99]

A comprehensive community study by Abt Associates that convened 2 panels of medical experts (1 consisting solely of doctors of chiropractic) concluded that, with respect to a list of 53 primary functions found to occur daily in medical offices, doctors of chiropractic were capable of making diagnoses in 92% of those activities and capable of making therapeutic contributions in more than 50% of them. [74]

On the other hand, in a competency examination comparing performances of chiropractic and medical students, chiropractic students scored higher than their medical counterparts only on the musculoskeletal portion of the examination and in several other areas scored substantially lower. [100]   And access to tertiary care facilities, such as hospitals, although growing for doctors of chiropractic, remains very limited. At the same time, health care delivery as well as competency in musculoskeletal areas by medical doctors has been shown in multiple settings to be inadequate. [12, 25, 101]   These findings would seem to position doctors of chiropractic in the United States on a spectrum somewhere between primary care providers and specialists upon referral.

At the very least, first contact for a minimum of musculoskeletal conditions would be indicated for doctors of chiropractic, buttressed by such findings by Sarnat et al [102, 103] that demonstrated major reductions of hospital days, outpatient surgical procedures, and health care costs when doctors of chiropractic were given first-contact privileges to patients within an independent physicians’ association.   Beyond managing only musculoskeletal conditions, doctors of chiropractic in 4 medical underserved communities (rural and urban underserved) tended to deliver primary care services. [104]   The same pattern was found to be true in rural communities of Ontario, with doctors of chiropractic delivering primary health care, bridged care, and interim care. [105]

It would appear that the scope of chiropractic extends beyond specialist to a first-contact provider.   This scope would certainly be for musculoskeletal conditions with the potential to extend into primary care should adequate research be able to justify such an expansion.   Indeed, given the shortages of primary care providers in some communities [106] and the cost-effectiveness and satisfaction with doctors of chiropractic serving in a de facto primary care capacity, [105] it would therefore seem appropriate to consider doctors of chiropractic as having successfully vacated the specialist’s role.



Discussion

Opposing tides have appeared to have pulled chiropractic in multiple directions.   Spine-only practitioners or more generalized?   Pain therapists or beyond?   Subluxation based or more medically oriented?   Alternative or mainstream practitioners?   Primary care, first-contact, or specialists upon referral?

Figure 1

Debates on these topics may still linger but hopefully have been nourished by the topics discussed in this article. Nevertheless, it is still possible to attach a number of distinguishing characteristics of doctors of chiropractic (Figure 1). Although there are numerous areas that present diverging viewpoints of chiropractic, at the same time, there are unambiguous, distinguishing characteristics of chiropractic.

Even with the recognition of the benefits of spinal manipulation in various government guidelines, [107–111] the rise of the alternative health care movement, advances in the US military and Veterans Administration, and persistently high levels of patient satisfaction, [112] the chiropractic profession remains underrepresented in most discussions of health care delivery. Hopefully, a clarification of chiropractic’s identity and a greater unity of practitioners in delivering this message will help to rectify this problem.


Limitations

This is a narrative review by a single author of multiple points of view of chiropractic, taking into consideration its relationships to other health care professions in manual therapy as well as its positioning in the 2 spectra of specialist/primary care and alternative/mainstream medicine. The main purpose of this assessment was to clarify, and in some instances refute, different viewpoints of chiropractic while providing several unambiguous characteristics to more clearly define chiropractic. Thus, this article is limited to 1 person’s viewpoint on this topic.



Conclusion

This discussion provides a roadmap for understanding the struggle for identity that has beset chiropractic since its inception. It has provided 6 perspectives: (1) concepts of manual medicine; (2) areas of interest beyond the spine; (3) concepts of neurology; (4) concepts of the chiropractic subluxation; (5) mainstream or alternative health care; and (6) primary care, first-contact provider, or specialist.

Numerous distinguishing characteristics, including providing a model of holistic, preventive medicine and embracing a concept of neurological imbalance, have prevailed.   At present, the chiropractic profession continues to be underrepresented in most discussions of health care delivery, a situation in which the greater clarification of chiropractic’s identity and more practitioner consensus may help to alleviate this problem.


Funding sources and potential conflicts of interest

No funding sources or conflicts of interest were reported for this study.


Contributorship information

Concept development (provided idea for the research): A.L.R.

Design (planned the methods to generate the results): A.L.R.

Supervision (provided oversight, responsible for organization and implementation, writing of the manuscript): A.L.R.

Data collection/processing (responsible for experiments, patient management, organization, or reporting data): A.L.R.

Analysis/interpretation (responsible for statistical analysis, evaluation, and presentation of the results): A.L.R.

Literature search (performed the literature search): A.L.R.

Writing (responsible for writing a substantive part of the manuscript): A.L.R.

Critical review (revised manuscript for intellectual content; this does not relate to spelling and grammar checking): A.L.R.



Practical Applications

  • Chiropractic’s distinguishing characteristics may provide a useful framework
    to achieve a greater consensus in resolving the lack of unified identity.

  • The strongest assets of chiropractic include that it embraces a model of holistic,
    preventive medicine by embracing a model of neurological imbalance
    in which form follows function.



References:

  1. Palmer, DD.
    Chiropractic.
    Med Brief Mon J Sci Med. 1900; 28: 635

  2. P. Carey, G. Clum, P. Dixon,
    The Identity of the Chiropractic Profession
    Final Report of the Identity Consultation Task Force
    World Federation of Chiropractic, Ontario, Canada, 2005

  3. Ebrall, P.
    A descriptive report of the case-mix within Australian chiropractic practice.
    Chiropr J Aust. 1992; 23: 92–97

  4. Hawk C, Long CR, Boulanger KT.
    Prevalence of Nonmusculoskeletal Complaints in Chiropractic Practice:
    Report From a Practice-based Research Program

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2001; 24 (3) March: 157–169

  5. Hartvigsen, J, Boding-Jensen, O, Hviid, H, and Grunnet-Nilsson, N.
    Danish chiropractic patients then and now: a comparison between 1962 and 1999.
    J Manip Physiol Ther. 2003; 26: 65–69

  6. Palmer, DD.
    The Chiropractor’s Adjuster:
    The Text-Book of the Science, Art and Philosophy of Chiropractic
    for Students and Practitioners.
    Portland Printing House, Portland, OR; 1910

  7. Brimhall, JC.
    Memo to David Chapman-Smith,
    Secretary-General of the World Federation of Chiropractic. ; 2005

  8. Freedman, KB and Bernstein, J.
    Educational Deficiencies in Musculoskeletal Medicine
    Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 2002 (Apr); 84–A (4): 604–608

  9. Freedman, KB and Bernstein, J.
    The Adequacy of Medical School Education in Musculoskeletal Medicine
    Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 1998 (Oct); 80-A (10): 1421–1427

  10. Matzkin, E, Smith, EL, Frccero, D, and Richardson, AB.
    Adequacy of Education in Musculoskeletal Medicine
    Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 2005; 87-A: 310–314

  11. Vlahos, K, Broadhurst, NA, and Bond, MJ.
    Knowledge of musculoskeletal medicine at undergraduate and post-graduate levels.
    Australas Musculoskelet Med. 2002; : 28–32

  12. Brantingham, JW, Bonnefin, D, Perle, SM et al.
    Manipulative therapy for lower extremity conditions: update of a literature review.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2012; 35: 127–166

  13. Brantingham, JW, Cassa, TK, Bonnefin, D et al.
    Manipulative Therapy for Shoulder Pain and Disorders:
    Expansion of a Systematic Review

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2011 (Jun); 34 (5): 314–346

  14. Globe, G, Farabaugh, RJ, Hawk, C et al.
    Clinical Practice Guideline: Chiropractic Care for Low Back Pain
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2016 (Jan); 39 (1): 1–22

  15. Hawk, C, Schneider, MJ, Vallone, S, and Hewitt, EG.
    Best Practices for Chiropractic Care of Children: A Consensus Update
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2016 (Mar); 39 (3): 158–168

  16. Hawk C, Schneider M, Evans MW Jr, Redwood D:
    Consensus Process to Develop a Best-Practice Document on the Role of Chiropractic Care
    in Health Promotion, Disease Prevention, and Wellness

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2012 (Sep); 35 (7): 556–567

  17. Alternative Medicine: Expanding Medical Horizons
    in: A Report to the National Institutes of Health on Alternative Medical Systems.
    NIH, Washington DC; 1995

  18. Downie AS, Vemulpad S, Bull PW:
    Quantifying the High-velocity, Low-amplitude Spinal Manipulative Thrust: A Systematic Review
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2010 (Sep); 33 (7): 542-53

  19. Bergmann, TF.
    Various forms of chiropractic technique.
    Chiropr Tech. 1993; 5: 53–55

  20. Campbell, SM, Winkelmann, RR, and Walkowski, S.
    Osteopathic manipulative treatment.
    J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2012; 5: 24–32

  21. Hammer, W.
    Physical therapists are learning HVLA thrust manipulation.
    Dyn Chiropr. 2012; 30

  22. Flynn, TW, Wainner, RS, and Fritz, JM.
    Spinal manipulation in physical therapist professional degree education:
    a model for teaching and integration into clinical practice.
    J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2006; 36: 577–587

  23. Coulter, I, Adams, A, Coggan, P, Wilkes, M, and Gonyea, M.
    A comparative study of chiropractic and medical education.
    Altern Ther Health Med. 1998; 4: 64–75

  24. Freedman, KB and Bernstein, J.
    The Adequacy of Medical School Education in Musculoskeletal Medicine
    Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 1998 (Oct); 80-A (10): 1421–1427

  25. Vlahos, K, Broadhurst, NA, and Bond, MJ.
    Knowledge of musculoskeletal medicine at undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
    Australas Musculoskelet Med. 2002; 7: 28–32

  26. Reuter, U, Hamling, M, Kavuk, I, Einhapl, KM, and Schielke, E.
    Vertebral Artery Dissections After Chiropractic Neck Manipulation
    in Germany Over Three Years

    (Are German Orthopedic Surgeons Killing People With Chiropractic?)
    J Neurol. 2006 (Jun); 253 (6): 724–730

  27. Haldeman, S, Carey, P, Townsend, M, and Papadopoulos, C.
    Arterial Dissections Following Cervical Manipulation: The Chiropractic Experience
    Canadian Medical Association Journal 2001 2001 (Oct 2); 165: 905–906

  28. Andel, V, Davidow, SL, Hollander, M, and Moreno, DA.
    The economics of health care quality and medical errors.
    J Health Care Finance. 2012; 39: 39–50

  29. Davis, PT, Hulbert, JR, Kassak, KM, and Meyer, JJ.
    Comparative Efficacy of Conservative Medical and Chiropractic Treatments
    for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: A Randomized Clinical Trial

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1998 (Jun); 21 (5): 317–326

  30. Winters, JC, Sobel, JS, Groenier, KH, Arendzen, HJ, and Meyboom-de Jong, B.
    Comparison of Physiotherapy, Manipulation, and Corticosteroid Injection
    for Treating Shoulder Complaints in General Practice:
    Randomised, Single Blind Study

    British Medical Journal 1997 (May 3); 314 (7090): 1320–1325

  31. Strait, BW and Kuchera, ML.
    Osteopathic manipulation for patients with confirmed mild, modest, and moderate carpal tunnel syndrome.
    J Am Osteopath Assoc. 1994; 94: 673

  32. Bergman, G.J.D., Winters, J.C., Gronier, K.H. et al.
    Manipulative Therapy in Addition to Usual Medical Care for Patients with
    Shoulder Dysfunction and Pain: A Randomized, Controlled Trial

    Ann Intern Med 2004 (Sep 21); 141 (6): 432-439

  33. Fallon, JM.
    The Role of the Chiropractic Adjustment in the Care and Treatment of
    332 Children with Otitis Media

    Journal of Clinical Chiropractic Pediatrics 1997 (Oct); 2 (2): 167–183

  34. Christensen, M and Kollasch, MW.
    Job Analysis of Chiropractic 2005
    National Board of Chiropractic Examiners, Greeley, CO; 2005

  35. Brimhall, JW and Cooter, S.
    Advances in percussion techniques for chiropractic practice and holistic health care.
    Int J Appl Kinesiol Med. 2001; 13: 44–49

  36. Gemmell, H and Allen, A.
    Relative immediate effect of ischaemic compression and activator trigger point
    therapy on active upper trapezius trigger points: a randomized trial.
    Clin Chiropr. 2008; 11: 175–181

  37. Brantingham, JW, Cassa, TK, Bronnefin, D et al.
    Manipulative and multimodal therapy for upper extremity and temporomandibular disorders:
    a systematic review.
    J Manipulative Physiol Rev. 2013; 36: 143–201

  38. Poulsen, E, Christensen, HW, Overgaard, S, and Hartvigsen, J.
    Prevalence of hip osteoarthritis in chiropractic practice in Denmark:
    a descriptive cross-sectional and prospective study.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2012; 35: 263–271

  39. Dwyer, L, Parkin-Smith, GF, Brantingham, JW et al.
    Manual and manipulative therapy in addition to rehabilitation for osteoarthritis
    of the knee: assessor-blind randomized pilot trial.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2015; 38: 1–21.e2

  40. Gatterman, MI.
    Fundamentals of Chiropractic. 2nd ed.
    Elsevier Mosby, St. Louis, MO; 2005

  41. Bergmann, TF, Peterson, DH, and Lawrence, DJ.
    Chiropractic Technique.
    Churchill-Livingstone, New York, NY; 1993

  42. Gatterman, MI.
    Foundations of Chiropractic Subluxation. 2nd ed.
    Elsevier Mosby, St. Louis, MO; 2005

  43. Association of Chiropractic Colleges.
    The Chiropractic Paradigm
    Position Paper 1 (July 1996).

  44. Rosner, AL.
    The Role of Subluxation in Chiropractic
    Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research,
    Des Moines, IA; 1997

  45. Johnson, C.
    Use of the Term Subluxation in Publications During the Formative Years
    of the Chiropractic Profession

    Journal of Chiropractic Humanities 2011 (Dec);   18 (1):   1–9

  46. Johnson, C.
    Modernized Chiropractic Reconsidered:
    Beyond Foot-on-Hose and Bones-Out-of-Place

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2006 (May); 29 (4): 253–254

  47. Council on Chiropractic Practice.
    Vertebral Subluxation in Chiropractic Practice. 4th ed.
    Council on Chiropractic Practice. ; 2013

  48. Ogura, T, Tashiro, M, Masud, M et al.
    Cerebral Metabolic Changes in Men After Chiropractic Spinal Manipulation for Neck Pain
    Altern Ther Health Med. 2011 (Nov); 17 (6): 12–17

  49. Haavik-Taylor H, Murphy B.
    Altered Central Integration of Dual Somatosensory Input After Cervical Spine Manipulation
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2010 (Mar); 33 (3): 178–188

  50. Srbely, J, Vernon, H, Lee, D, and Polgar, M.
    Immediate Effects of Spinal Manipulative Therapy on Regional
    Antinociceptive Effects in Myofascial Tissues in Healthy Young Adults

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2013 (Jul); 36 (6): 333–341

  51. Karason, AB and Drysdale, IP.
    Somatovisceral response following osteopathic HVLAT: a pilot study on the effect of
    unilateral lumbosacral high-velocity low-amplitude thrust technique on the cutaneous
    blood flow in the lower limb.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2003; 26: 220–225

  52. Song, XJ, Gan, Q, Cao, J-L, Wang, Z-B, and Rupert, RL.
    Spinal Manipulation Reduces Pain and Hyperalgesia After
    Lumbar Intervertebral Foramen Inflammation in the Rat

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2006 (Jan); 29 (1): 5–13

  53. Teodorczyk-Injeyan, JA, Injeyan, HS, and Ruegg, R.
    Spinal Manipulative Therapy Reduces Inflammatory Cytokines
    but NotSubstance P Production in Normal Subjects

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2006 (Jan); 29 (1): 14–21

  54. Ormos, G, Mehnishi, JN, and Bakacs, T.
    Reduction in High Blood Tumor Necrosis Factor- α Levels After Manipulative Therapy
    in 2 Cervicogenic Headache Patients

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2009 (Sep); 32 (7): 586–591

  55. Egan, TS, Kr, Meltzer, and Standley, PR.
    Importance of strain direction in regulating human fibroblast proliferation and
    cytokine secretion: a useful in vitro model for soft tissue injury and manual medicine treatments.
    J Manip Physiol Ther. 2007; 30: 584–592

  56. Wiberg, JM, Nordsteen, J, and Nilsson, N.
    The Short-term Effect of Spinal Manipulation in the Treatment of Infantile Colic:
    A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial with a Blinded Observer

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1999 (Oct); 22 (8): 517–522

  57. Miller, JE, Newell, D, and Bolton, JE.
    Efficacy of Chiropractic Manual Therapy on Infant Colic:
    A Pragmatic Single-Blind, Randomized Controlled Trial

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2012 (Oct); 35 (8): 600–607

  58. Taylor HH, Murphy B.
    The Effects of Spinal Manipulation on Central Integration of Dual Somatosensory Input
    Observed After Motor Training: A Crossover Study

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2010 (May); 33 (4): 261–272

  59. Triano, J and Luttges, M.
    Subtle intermittent mechanical irritation of the sciatic nerve of mice.
    J Manip Physiol Ther. 1980; 3: 75–80

  60. Israel, V.
    Changes in nerve physiology in the rat after induced subluxation.
    Articulations. 1983; 1: 9–10

  61. Sato, A and Swenson, RS.
    Sympathetic nervous system response to mechanical stress of the spinal column in rats.
    J Manip Physiol Ther. 1984; 7: 141–147

  62. Christiansen, J and Meyer, J.
    Altered metabolic enzyme activities in fast and slow twitch muscles due to
    induced sciatic neuropathy in the rat.
    J Manip Physiol Ther. 1987; 10: 227–231

  63. DeBoer, KF, Schutz, M, and McKnight, ME.
    Acute effects of spinal manipulation on gastrointestinal myoelectric activity
    in conscious rabbits.
    Man Med. 1988; 3: 85–94

  64. Brennan, PC, Kokjohn, K, Triano, JJ, Fritz, TE, Wardrip, CL, and Hondras, MA.
    Immunologic Correlates of Reduced Spinal Mobility: Preliminary Observations in a Dog Model
    Proceedings of the International Conference on Spinal Manipulation 1991: 118–121

  65. Christiansen, JA, Beals, S, Burnham, G, Magnani, M, and Urbanek, S.
    Enzyme changes in rabbit muscles due to chronic compressive nerve irritation.
    in: Proceedings of the World Federation of Chiropractic Congress, 1991. ; 1991

  66. Gillette, RG, Kramis, RC, and Roberts, WJ.
    Characterization of spinal somatosensory neurons having receptive fields on
    lumbar tissues of cats.
    Pain. 1993; 54: 85–98

  67. Hu, JW, Yu, X-M, Vernon, H, and Sessle, BJ.
    Excitatory effects on neck and jaw muscle activity of inflammatory irritant
    injections into cervical paraspinal tissues.
    Pain. 1993; 55: 243–250

  68. Sato, A, Sato, Y, and Swenson, RS.
    Effects of morphine on somatocardiac sympathetic reflexes in spinalized cats.
    J Auton Nerv Syst. 1985; 12: 175–184

  69. Araki, T, Ito, K, Kurosawa, M, and Sato, A.
    The somato-adrenal medullary reflexes in rats.
    J Auton Nerv Syst. 1981; 3: 161–170

  70. Budgell, B, Holtz, H, and Sato, A.
    Spinovisceral reflexes evoked by noxious and innocuous stimulation of the lumbar spine.
    J Neuromusculoskelet Syst. 1995; 3: 122–131

  71. Sato, A, Sato, Y, Shimado, F, and Torigata, Y.
    Change in gastric motility produced by nociceptive stimulation of the skin in rats.
    Brain Res. 1975; 87: 151–159

  72. Lisi, AJ, Holmes, EJ, and Ammendolia, C.
    High-velocity low-amplitude spinal manipulation for symptomatic lumbar disk disease:
    a systematic review of the literature.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2005; 28: 429–442

  73. Assendelft, WJ, Morton, SC, Yu, El, Suttorp, MJ, and Shekelle, PG.
    Spinal manipulative therapy for low back pain: a meta-analysis of effectiveness
    relative to other therapies.
    Ann Intern Med. 2003; 138: 871–881

  74. Gaumer, GL, Walker, A, and Su, S.
    Chiropractic and a new taxonomy of primary care activities.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2001; 24: 239–259

  75. Zhu, Y, Haldeman, S, Starr, A, Seffinger, MA, and Su, SH.
    Paraspinal evoked cerebral potentials in patients with unilateral low back pain.
    Spine. 1993; 18: 1096–1102

  76. Haavik-Taylor, H and Murphy, B.
    Cervical Spine Manipulation Alters Sensorimotor Integration:
    A Somatosensory Evoked Potential Study

    Clin Neurophysiol. 2007 (Feb); 118 (2): 391–402

  77. Dishman, JD, Doughterty, PE, and Burke, JR.
    Evaluation of the effect of postural perturbation on motoneural activity following
    various methods of lumbar spinal manipulation.
    Spine J. 2005; 5: 650–659

  78. Suter, E, McMorland, G, Herzog, W, and Bray, R.
    Conservative lower back treatment reduces inhibition in knee-extensor muscles:
    a randomized controlled trial.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2000; 23: 76–80

  79. Budgell, B and Harano, F.
    Innocuous mechanical stimulation of the neck and alterations in heart-rate
    variability in healthy young adults.
    Auton Neurosci. 2001; 91: 96–99

  80. Budgell, B and Polus, B.
    The effects of thoracic manipulation on heart rate variability:
    a controlled crossover trial.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2006; 29: 603–610

  81. Welch A., Boone R.
    Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Responses to Specific Diversified
    Adjustments to Chiropractic Vertebral Subluxations of
    the Cervical and Thoracic Spine

    J Chiropractic Medicine 2008 (Sep); 7 (3): 86–93

  82. Rosner, A, Leisman, G, Gilchriest, J, Charles, E,
    Keschner, M, and Minond, M.
    Reliability and validity of therapy localization as determined from multiple examiners
    and instrumentation.
    Funct Neurol Rehabil Ergon. 2015; 53: 365–386

  83. Eisenberg, DM, Kessler, RC, Foster, C, Norlock, FE,
    Calkins, DR, and Delbanco, TL.
    Unconventional Medicine in the United States: Prevalence, Costs, and Patterns of Use
    New England Journal of Medicine 1993 (Jan 28); 328 (4): 246–252

  84. Bunk, S.
    Is Integrative Medicine the Future?
    Relman-Weil Debate Focuses on Scientific Evidence Issues

    The Scientist 1999 (May 10): 13 (10): 1

  85. Institute of Medicine.
    Evidence-based Medicine and the Changing Nature of Healthcare:
    2007 IOM Annual Meeting Summary.
    National Academies Press, Washington, DC; 2008

  86. Wenban, AB.
    Is Chiropractic Evidence Based? A Pilot Study
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2003 (Jan); 26 (1): 47

  87. BMJ clinical evidence.
    BMC Publishing Group Limited, ; 2007

  88. Gatterman, MI.
    A patient-centered paradigm: a model for chiropractic education and research.
    J Altern Complement Med. 1995; 1: 371–386

  89. Coulter, I.
    The patient, the practitioner, and wellness: paradigm lost, paradigm gained.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1990; 13: 107–111

  90. Donovan, J, Cassidy, JD, Cancelliere, C et al.
    Beyond the Spine: A New Clinical Research Priority
    J Can Chiropr Assoc. 2015 (Mar); 59 (1): 6–12

  91. Bronfort, G, Haas, M, Evans, R, Kawchuk, G, and Dagenais, S.
    Evidence-informed Management of Chronic Low Back Pain with Spinal Manipulation and Mobilization
    Spine J. 2008 (Jan); 8 (1): 213–225

  92. Bronfort G Haas M Evans RL et al.
    Efficacy of Spinal Manipulation and Mobilization for Low Back Pain and Neck Pain:
    A Systematic Review and Best Evidence Synthesis

    Spine J (N American Spine Soc) 2004 (May);   4 (3):   335–356

  93. Meeker, W., & Haldeman, S. (2002).
    Chiropractic: A Profession at the Crossroads of Mainstream and Alternative Medicine
    Annals of Internal Medicine 2002 (Feb 5); 136 (3): 216–227

  94. Chalbi, A, Tuchin, PJ, and Russell, MB.
    Manual Therapies for Migraine: A Systematic Review
    J Headache Pain. 2011 (Apr); 12 (2): 127–133

  95. Alcantara, J, Alcantara, JD, and Alcantara, J.
    The use of validated outcome measures in the chiropractic care of pregnant patients:
    a systematic review of the literature.
    Complement Ther Clin Pract. 2015; 21: 131–136

  96. Starfield, B.
    In reply.
    JAMA. 1993; 270: 24–34

  97. Budetti, PP.
    Achieving a uniform federal primary care policy.
    Opportunities presented by national healthcare reform.
    JAMA. 1993; 269: 498–501

  98. Barondess, JA.
    The future of generalism.
    Ann Intern Med. 1993; 119: 153–160

  99. Bowers, L and Mootz, RD.
    the nature of primary care. The chiropractor’s role.
    Top Clin Chiropr. 1995; 2: 68–84

  100. Sandefur, R, Febbo, TA, and Rupert, RL.
    Assessment of Knowledge of Primary Care Activities
    in a Sample of Medical and Chiropractic Students

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2005 (Jun); 28 (5): 336–344

  101. Freedman, KB and Bernstein, J.
    Educational Deficiencies in Musculoskeletal Medicine
    Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 2002 (Apr); 84–A (4): 604–608

  102. Sarnat, RL, Winterstein, J, and Cambron, JA.
    Clinical Utilization and Cost Outcomes from an Integrative Medicine
    Independent Physician Association: An Additional 3-year Update

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2007 (May); 30 (4): 263–269

  103. Sarnat, RL and Winterstein, J.
    Clinical and Cost Outcomes of an Integrative Medicine IPA
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2004 (Jun) ; 27 (5): 336–347

  104. Teitelbaum, M.
    The role of chiropractic in primary care: findings of four community studies.
    J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2000; 23: 601–609

  105. Hollenberg, DH, Lytle, ML, Walji, RW, and Cooley, KC.
    Addressing provider shortage in underserviced areas: the role of traditional,
    complementary and alternative medicine (TCAM) providers in Canadian rural healthcare.
    EJIM. 2013; 5: 15–26

  106. Hyman, MA.
    The real alternative medicine. Reconsidering conventional medicine.
    Altern Ther Health Med. 2005; 11: 10–12

  107. Bigos, S, Bowyer, O, Braen, G et al.
    Acute Low Back Pain in Adults: Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14
    in: AHCPR Publication no. 95-0642.
    Agency for Health Care Policy and Research,
    Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Rockville; 1994

  108. Rosen, M. Back Pain:
    Report of a Clinical Standards Advisory Group Committee on Back Pain.
    HMSO, London; 1994

  109. Commission on Alternative Medicine,
    Social Departementete.
    Legitimization for Vissa Kiropraktorer.
    Stockholm. 1987; 12: 13–16

  110. Thompson, CJ.
    Second Report, Medicare Benefits Review Committee.
    Commonwealth Government Printer, Chapter 10 [Chiropractic], Canberra; 1986

  111. Hasselberg, PD.
    Chiropractic in New Zealand: report of a Commission of Inquiry.
    Government Printer, Wellington; 1979

  112. Weigel PA, Hockenberry JM, Wolinsky FD.
    Chiropractic Use in the Medicare Population: Prevalence, Patterns, and Associations
    With 1-year Changes in Health and Satisfaction With Care

    J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2014 (Mar); 37 (8): 542-551

Return to THE NAYSAYERS CORNER

Return to CHIROPRACTIC IDENTITY

Return to ALL ABOUT CHIROPRACTIC

Return to PRESCRIPTION RIGHTS and EXPANDED PRACTICE

Since 7-29-2016

                  © 1995–2024 ~ The Chiropractic Resource Organization ~ All Rights Reserved