FROM:
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies 2017 (Mar 14); 25: 9 ~ FULL TEXT
Guillaume Goncalves, Christine Le Scanff1, and Charlotte Leboeuf-Yde
CIAMS,
University of Paris-Sud,
University of Paris-Saclay
Background Chiropractors are primarily concerned with musculoskeletal disorders but have the responsibility to deal also with prevention in other areas.
Objectives To establish the prevalence of chiropractors who have a positive opinion on the use of primary prevention (PP), their actual use of PP, and the proportion of patients who consult for PP in relation to
(i) musculoskeletal disorders,
(ii) public health issues, or
(iii) chiropractic treatment for wellness.
Method A systematic search for literature was done using PubMed, Embase, Index to Chiropractic Literature, and and updated on February 15th 2017. Inclusion criteria were: surveys on chiropractors and/or chiropractic patients, information had to be present on PP in relation to the percentage of patients who consult for PP in chiropractic practice or in a chiropractic student clinic, and/or the percentage of chiropractors who reported using PP, and/or information on chiropractors’ opinions of the use of PP, in the English, French, or Scandinavian languages. The review followed the PRISMA guidelines. Articles were classified as ‘good’, ‘acceptable’ and ‘unacceptable’ based on scores of quality items. Results from the latter group were not taken into account.
Results Twenty-five articles were included, reporting on twenty-six studies, 19 of which dealt with wellness. The proportion of chiropractors who stated that they had a positive opinion on primary prevention (PP) was generally higher than the proportion of chiropractors offering PP. Most chiropractors offered some type of PP for musculoskeletal disorders and more than a half stated that they did so in the public health area but also for wellness. For all types of PP, however, it was rarely stated to be the reason for patients consulting. Regardless the type of PP, the proportion of patients who actually consulted specifically for PP was much smaller than the proportion of chiropractors offering PP.
Conclusion More research efforts have been put into wellness than into prevention of musculoskeletal disorders or public health-related disorders. It therefore seems that parts of the chiropractic profession are in search of an understanding of various aspects of clinical practice over and above its traditional musculoskeletal role. Interestingly, only a small proportion of chiropractic patients consult for primary prevention (PP), despite the readiness of the profession to offer such services.
Keywords Chiropractic Primary prevention Public health Prevention of musculoskeletal disorders Wellness
From the Full-Text Article:
Introduction
It is well accepted that non-communicable diseases, whether musculoskeletal or not, represent a social and economic burden, because they can be the source of long-term morbidity, and with increasing longevity they are expected to become increasingly common [1]. The prevention of such diseases can therefore minimize costs of health care, improve quality of life, and decrease both morbidity and mortality. Guidelines exist on how to approach this, such as the “Healthy People 2020”, which promotes modification of individual behaviour with a multidisciplinary approach [2].
Prevention can be performed at three stages of disease. Primary prevention (PP) deals with the prevention of disease in healthy people, secondary prevention is used to prevent a condition from recurring, whereas tertiary prevention is often defined as maintaining at a reasonable level a chronic condition that cannot be reversed [3]. In this review, we shall deal with PP only.
Chiropractors are recognized to be primary health care practitioners in many parts of the world, and consequently the regional Councils on Chiropractic Education state that a public health approach including health promotion should be implemented in chiropractic undergraduate programs [4, 5, 6, 7]. It therefore seems logical that chiropractors have a role to play in the prevention of, at least, musculoskeletal disorders. Examples of this are campaigns in relation to posture, ‘Straighten up’ [8], and physical activity, ‘Just start walking’ [9].
Back pain and extremity problems can result in reduced physical activity with secondary consequences, such as obesity and reduced cardiovascular fitness, so the role of chiropractors would extend beyond that of trying to prevent back pain. In fact, the World Health Organization supports the concept that chiropractors have a role in the prevention of musculoskeletal disorders and other public health issues by stating that “Chiropractic is a health care profession concerned with the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disorders of the musculoskeletal system and the effect of these disorders on general health” [10].
In addition to this, the World Federation of Chiropractic endorses and encourages chiropractors’ participation in public health promotion activities apart from musculoskeletal health [10]. Various preventive health-related issues, apart from the purely musculoskeletal, are also suitable to address in a primary care practice, some of which relate to life-style (e.g. nutrition, physical activities, and stress-management). The fact that chiropractic patients usually are partially undressed during examination and treatment makes also screening for skin cancers an appropriate task for chiropractors.
The ‘classical’ form of PP in relation to hygiene, improved working conditions, vaccinations etc. has resulted in large improvements of the public health status, but in more affluent countries and groups of people a more recent variant of PP has become apparent, that of the ‘wellness movement’. Wellness can be defined as “an active process in which an individual changes his or her behaviour in a manner which promotes health in all dimensions” [11]. Chiropractors, who traditionally adhere to the concept of healthy living, appear to have a natural inclination towards this approach.
Some chiropractors assume that a spinal derangement/dysfunction (variously called ‘subluxation’, ‘fixation’, ‘manipulative lesion’) can be reliably detected in both symptomatic and asymptomatic spines, and that the chiropractic manipulation (‘adjustment’), with or without other supportive treatments, can remove derangements and improve dysfunctions, a therapeutic approach which in turn is believed to have a favourable effect not only on present but also on future back problems. Some chiropractors also believe that this has a favourable effect on health in general, both in relation to a general feeling of well-being [12] and disease prevention [13]. Some even believe that this may impact on longevity [14, 15].
Some of the above preventive activities intuitively make sense, whereas others are controversial. Therefore, we wanted to learn more about what chiropractors think and do in relation to primary prevention (PP) and also what actually happens in their clinic. In other words, do patients consult for PP? For these reasons, we undertook a systematic review to obtain answers to the following questions:
What is the prevalence of chiropractors with positive opinions of the use of PP?
What is the prevalence of chiropractors who use PP?
What is the proportion of chiropractic patients who consult for PP?
We attempted to deal with each of these questions from three angles:
1/ Musculoskeletal conditions,
2/ Public health issues, and
3/ Wellness, which we defined as PP through chiropractic care.
Method
The AMSTAR checklist for methodological quality of systematic review [16] was followed except for assessment of publication bias and the assessment of conflict of interest, because there were no benefits to gain for surveying chiropractors. Also, we did not explicitly search the grey literature. The review was registered in PROSPERO (CRD42016049453).
Search strategy
The search included peer-reviewed articles in journals that could be traced through PubMed, Embase, Index to Chiropractic Literature, and . We searched the literature from January 2000 until February 15th 2017 to include only recent information. Search strategies were developed with a health science research librarian, using free text words.
For Medline these were: “chiropract* and (wellness or primary or prevent* or health or promotion or service*) and (questionnaire* or survey*)”. In Embase the search strategy was: “chiropract* and (wellness or primary or prevent* or health or promotion or service*) and (questionnaire* or survey*) and [embase]/lim not [medline]/lim)”. In Index to Chiropractic Literature it was: “chiropract* and (wellness or primary or prevent* or health or promotion or service*) and (questionnaire* or survey*)”. In it was: “(chiropractic or chiropractors or chiropractor) and (wellness or primary or prevention or preventive or health or promotion or service or services) and (questionnaire or questionnaires or survey or surveys)”.
A hand search was also done consulting texts and reference lists of relevant articles. We did not search the non-peer reviewed literature specifically, but would accept such texts if they were easily available.
Screening procedure
The first author (GG) selected the articles from the titles based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Thereafter, two authors (GG and CLY) independently screened abstracts and full texts using the inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Inclusion criteria were:
Surveys on chiropractors and/or chiropractic patients.
Information had to be present on: PP in relation to information on chiropractors’ opinions of the use of PP, and/or the percentage of chiropractors who reported using PP, and/or the percentage of patients who consult for PP in chiropractic practice or in a chiropractic student clinic.
Languages: English, French, Swedish, Danish or Norwegian, as these were the languages the authors could easily read.
Exclusion criteria were:
Articles reporting on the topics described above but on treatments not usually given by chiropractors (e.g. advice on vaccination, prevention in relation to stress/mental illness, orthopaedic shoes, substance abuse, injuries/ trauma/ falls/ violence or non-muscular conditions in pregnant women). We also excluded articles on improvement of sport performance.
If several publications existed from the same study, we would select the most relevant or complete of the publications in relation to our study objectives.
Chiropractic students and chiropractic academic staff were not defined as ‘chiropractors’.
Data extraction
The information in the selected articles was reviewed in relation to two elements: 1/quality (i.e. representativeness and validity) and 2/results. Three checklists were designed for those aspects. Our requirements were lenient. We did not check contents of references to trace additional or missing information. We sought our information in the methods and result sections but not from the abstract or title.
A score was given to each selected article regarding various quality aspects and reported as a percentage. This score was used to determine the weak and strong points in this research field but also to classify the articles in descending order based on their individual total quality score. One point was given for correct answers. When the answer was incorrect or missing, it was given a score of 0. In some cases, half a score could be given. When an item was irrelevant because of the study design (e.g. no information would be available on patients if the purpose of the study was to study only chiropractors), it would be denoted as ‘irrelevant’.
Table 1
|
The first checklist refers to the representativeness of study samples (Table 1). Points were given for the following reasons:
Target population defined: Specific subpopulations may have different practice patterns, therefore it is important to define the target population. This would give one point.
Study sample: One point was given if the study sample(s) was/were described at least for age, sex, geographical distribution, or professional background.
Sampling method: To avoid selection bias, the whole population, a random, or – possibly – a consecutive sample would be needed, resulting in one point, whereas a convenience sample brought 0 points. National chiropractic associations were considered whole populations and conference participants were classified as belonging to a convenience sample.
Response rate: The higher the response rate, the easier to generalize the results to the underlying population. Therefore, the reader needs to be informed of the percentage of participants. One point was given for providing this information or if it was possible to calculate. Response rates in surveys are often low but, nevertheless, we considered samples of 10% or less to be unacceptable, resulting in 0 point, as it would severely limit the generalisability of the results in such cases.
Response/Non response comparison: If the response rate was lower than the arbitrarily determined cut-point of 80%, we expected to find some type of responder/non-responder analysis. One point was given for this, if this comparison was needed. If it was not needed, because the response rate was above this cut-point, the response was defined as “not applicable” and given one point as well. If the response rate was not given but a response/non response comparison done, one point was given for the latter but not for the former.
Table 2
|
The second checklist deals with the validity of the results (Table 2). Points were considered for the following items:
Definition/explanation of PP: PP must be well defined or at least explained in order to show that the authors have a clear understanding of which concept they are studying. However, it was not considered reasonable to expect authors to define every aspect of a study with multiple outcome variables. Therefore, this definition was required only if prevention was the main topic of the study (one point if there was a definition in the introduction or method in articles having prevention as main topic).
Relevant questions or questionnaires available for the reader: Questions and/or questionnaires must be appropriate, for which reason it is important to make them accessible in the article or available on request, thus resulting in one point.
Attempt to assure quality of survey instrument: The quality of the survey instrument was considered acceptable if questions were selected based on a thorough review of the literature, if there was a pilot study, or if the questionnaire/relevant questions had been previously tested at least for user friendliness, thus resulting in one point.
Opinions to PP, as reported by chiropractors: One point was given if the reporting was anonymous, or if the confidentiality of the chiropractor was respected.
Use of PP: One point was given if the reporting was anonymous or if the confidentiality of the chiropractor was respected.
Reasons for consulting reported by the chiropractor: One point was given for actuarial reporting (i.e. file search or actual counting) and 0 point for approximate reporting (i.e. based on non-factual information).
Reasons for consulting reported by patients: One point was given for patients providing reasons for consulting independently of the treating chiropractors (anonymously) or if it was stated that the patients’ confidentiality was respected.
One of the authors of this review had co-authored one of the reviewed articles, therefore a third person reviewed that article. Disagreements between the two reviewers were discussed to achieve consensus. If they could not reach agreement, the third author would be consulted.
Thereafter, articles were arbitrarily classified, based on the scores of the two quality checklists. The article was classified as ‘good’ if the final score was ≥ 80%, as ‘acceptable’ if the final score was between 60 and 79%, and as ‘unacceptable’ if the final score was < 60%. This classification was partly based on the spread of data, because the difference between groups, particularly between ‘acceptable’ and ‘unacceptable’, should not depend on one single point.
Table 3
|
It was often difficult to understand how chiropractors and patients defined the three concepts of PP (prevention of musculoskeletal disorders, public health prevention, wellness through chiropractic treatment). In such cases, we looked for specific words in the text that could indicate the underlying meaning and classified the articles as shown in Table 3.
Analysis and presentations of data
Assessment of the articles was done using the checklists independently by two of the authors, after which their respective checklists were compared, followed by a discussion on unclear points. Such queries were always resolved, because usually different interpretations of articles arose from difficulties in finding the relevant text.
Table 4
|
The articles were arranged in descending order in relation to their classification and their final quality score with a colour-coding of the three subgroups (i.e. ‘good’, ‘acceptable’, and ‘unacceptable’). Results (Table 4) were thereafter interpreted for each of the three main concepts of PP (musculoskeletal, public health and wellness) in relation to the three main study objectives of the study. When interpreting the results we disregarded the studies that we considered to be of unacceptable quality. For the others, if estimates of similar items were largely different, mainly studies with the better-quality scores would be taken into account. Therefore, results were first considered for the ‘good’ studies and then for the ‘acceptable’ studies.
Results
Description of studies
Figure 1
Table 5
|
As can be seen in Figure 1, of the 1349 initially screened articles, we retained 25 that were published between 2000 and 2017. Five of these studied prevention as their main topic and all of these attempted to describe what was meant by PP. One of these stood out by using a particularly complete definition of prevention in relation to the level of perceived health in the target group (Table 5). One of the studies dealt with the early detection of pre-cancerous lesions, whereas words such as public health, health promotion, wellness, preventing illness, and ‘Healthy People’ were used in the others. Nevertheless, clearly specific definitions were rarely provided. When ‘wellness’ was the topic (n = 19), a description of how exactly it was perceived or dealt with, was provided only in four articles [17, 18, 19, 20]. One article [21] reported on two separate studies of different design that were reported as such in tables and text.
As shown in Table 4, chiropractors’ use or opinions of PP were studied in 15 studies and their patients were targeted in 13 of the studies. Nine studies dealt with specific chiropractic interest groups, such as those specializing in paediatric treatment (n = 7).
When chiropractors were the source of information on PP, seven studies reported on their opinions about PP in their practice, and the prevalence of chiropractors using PP was reported also in 12 studies. Nineteen of the studies dealt with PP in relation to wellness, eight discussed PP in the light of public health, and nine concerned themselves with the PP of musculoskeletal conditions.
Eleven studies were classified as ‘good’, nine as ‘acceptable’, and six as ‘unacceptable’ in relation to their methodological quality. As shown in Tables 1 and 2, the least frequently covered methodological items were 1/an appropriate responder/non responder analysis (missing 22 times/37 possible), 2/the provision of relevant questions or survey instrument (missing 15 times/25), 3/an appropriate sampling method (missing 12 times/38). Six articles [22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27], considered by us to be ‘unacceptable’ (four reporting on paediatric subgroups), were ignored in the data analysis based on our pre hoc decision. The scores in each study have been incorporated in the result checklist (Table 4).
Table 6
|
The many public health attitudes and activities reported in the various studies were listed but not described in Table 6. Only five of these topics were arbitrarily selected for our analysis (Table 4). These were:
(i) prescription of dietary supplements or advice on nutrition;
(ii) prescription of/advice on physical activity;
(iii) advice on tobacco cessation;
(iv) detection of skin lesion; and
(v) non-specific public health).
They seem best to represent the opinions and actions of the surveyed chiropractors in relation to their public health approach.
What is the prevalence of chiropractors with positive opinions on the use of PP?
Musculoskeletal disorders (Table 4, column 1)
There was no study reporting on chiropractors’ opinions on musculoskeletal PP.
General public health approach (Table 4, column 2)
Two ‘good’ studies [17, 28] reported on chiropractors’ opinions on PP for public health in general, showing that the vast majority of chiropractors (around 90%) had positive opinions on the prescription of physical activity or nutritional advice. Also, almost 70% of chiropractors had positive opinions on tobacco cessation advice. The proportion of chiropractors who had positive opinions on skin lesion detection varied between 57% and 81% [17, 29], depending on how the question was asked.
Wellness (Table 4, column 3)
Two studies (one ‘good’, one ‘acceptable’) reported positive opinions on ‘wellness’, without further definitions or explanations. In the ‘good’ article [28], 92% of chiropractors were reported to be “wellness-oriented” whereas in the other, 8% agreed to being focused on “wellness/prevention” [30].
Two other ‘good’ surveys defined wellness through the treatment of spinal ‘subluxation’. According to one of them, 19% of chiropractors considered the “chiropractic subluxation as an obstruction to human health” (by the author of that article these chiropractors were classified as ‘unorthodox’) [20], whereas, according to the second study, 93% of chiropractors had a positive attitude to ‘subluxation screening’, which could include several types of prevention but, in our opinion, indicated a belief in the use of subluxation detection as part of PP [17].
What is the prevalence of chiropractors who use primary prevention?
Musculoskeletal disorders (Table 4, column 4)
Three studies dealt with PP of musculoskeletal disorders. According to the ‘good’ study, 90% of chiropractors provided information on prevention of musculoskeletal disorders [17].
One of two ‘acceptable’ studies was in agreement with the ‘good’ one, with similar high percentages for advice on posture (96%) and movement patterns (88%) [31]. The other ‘acceptable’ study [32] reported that more than 70% of chiropractors treated patients for ‘spinal health maintenance/prevention’, without specifying the type of prevention (primary or other).
General public health approach (Table 4, column 5)
Seven articles dealt with public health advice and public health screening procedures included in chiropractic consultations. All of these articles reported on the use of various screening procedures and lifestyle advice.
Lifestyle advice reported in relation to nutrition was dealt with in four studies (two ‘good’ and two ‘acceptable’). The two ‘good’ [17, 19] articles reported that 86% and 82% of chiropractors give nutritional advice in their practice. The other two studies [31, 33] reported this for 77% and 79%.
Chiropractors also reported that they prescribed or advised on physical activity. According to three articles (two ‘good’ [17, 28], one ‘acceptable’ [31]), around 90% of chiropractors did this type of PP. All of these three articles dealt also with tobacco cessation and reported that around 60% of chiropractors gave advice on that subject.
Two ‘good’ articles dealt with the screening for skin cancers. One reported that about 50% of chiropractors did this type of prevention, without defining the frequency of use [17]. The other article [29] reported the same proportion (53%) for the chiropractors who did this prevention at every visit, and showed that 94% screened all new patients.
One ‘acceptable’ article [32] dealt with ‘smoking/drug/alcohol’. It was impossible to isolate data on smoking cessation only, the prevalence of chiropractors using this global lifestyle approach was therefore not included in Table 4.
Wellness (Table 4, column 6)
One ‘good’ study [34] reported that more than 90% of chiropractors included periodic maintenance care/wellness care in their clinical routine. This means that the exact proportion of PP is unknown, as maintenance care would be a mixture of secondary and tertiary prevention.
Two studies reported the use of wellness without further specification. It was used by approximately 50% of chiropractors according to both the ‘good’ [35] and the ‘acceptable’ [36] study. The ‘acceptable’ study also included maintenance care under the definition of wellness, as chiropractors’ main sector of activity, thus – again – making it impossible to differentiate between the two.
What is the proportion of chiropractic patients who consult for primary prevention?
Musculoskeletal disorders (Table 4, column 7)
Four studies (one ‘good’ [21], three ‘acceptable’ [18, 21, 37]) informed us about the proportion of patients who consulted for prevention of musculoskeletal disorders. One [18] of the ‘acceptable’ studies dealt with the general population. The other three, two of which were reported in one article, dealt with paediatric patients [21, 37]. The proportion of patients who consulted for PP was around 10% in all ‘acceptable’ studies. However, the ‘good’ study, which in fact based its data on all chiropractic consultations in Norway during a given period, reported a proportion of only 1%.
General public health approach (Table 4, column 8)
One’acceptable’ article dealt with the aspect of PP through a classical public health concept, by asking patients for their reasons to consult. In this study of chiropractic patients consulting practitioners with a special interest in wellness, 16% [18] considered themselves to be at risk. For an explanation of this concept, see Table 5.
Wellness (Table 4, column 9)
When patients came for a ‘wellness consultation’ it was difficult to know what they really aimed for. In three ‘good’ [38, 39, 40] and three ‘acceptable’ [18, 37, 41] studies, none made it perfectly clear that by ‘wellness’ they meant disease prevention through ‘subluxation correction’. Nevertheless, in these studies the chiropractors were said to be primarily consulted for ‘wellness’ and/or ‘preventive care’, and it seems unlikely that patients would primarily consult the chiropractor to provide preventive work other than through ‘classical’ chiropractic care (i.e. spinal manipulation and other usual, associated activities). The prevalence for this ranged between 2% (paediatric patients) to 21% (adult patients).
Discussion
Summary of findings and discussion of results
This appears to be the first systematic review on the use of PP in chiropractic practice. We noted that the most frequently studied topic was wellness. Regardless the type of PP (musculoskeletal prevention, public health, or wellness) the proportion of patients who actually consulted specifically for PP was much smaller than the proportion of chiropractors offering the various types of PP, which in turn, in general, was smaller than the proportion of chiropractors who stated that they had a positive opinion on the various types of PP.
More specifically, positive opinions and attitudes to PP were revealed by the majority of chiropractors for both public health activities and wellness, whereas this question was not studied in relation to musculoskeletal prevention. Not surprisingly, almost all surveyed chiropractors offered some type of PP for musculoskeletal disorders and more than half stated that they did so in the public health area but also for wellness.
Although, for all types of PP, it was rarely stated to be the reason for consulting, it could of course have been dealt with somehow through the treatment course, in relation to issues other than those causing the initial reason for consulting.
Table 7
|
To simplify the interpretation of these results, the three levels of approach [(i) opinion, (ii) use of service, and (iii) reason for consulting] in relation to the three types of PP [(i) musculoskeletal, (ii) public health, and (iii) wellness] have been illustrated in Table 7.
We found it surprising that so few patients feel that chiropractors have something to offer in this area, although the chiropractic profession is encouraged to participate in preventive activities and clearly is interested to do so [42]. The reasons for this need to be explored. Are the reasons that patients, in general, consider chiropractors as belonging to a profession that treats their back problems only, or is it because what is offered is perceived as irrelevant or useless, or is it simply due to lack of information on the subject? Another question is, do chiropractors have the knowledge and skills to perform PP? In addition, it is also important to base PP on facts; what advice and treatments are available to perform PP of musculoskeletal disorders and is chiropractic care really capable of improving the feeling of general well-being, to prevent disease, and improve longevity?
Methodological considerations of the reviewed studies
Quality scores
The quality of studies varied. We classified ten of the studies as being of good quality. On the other hand, we removed six studies from the reporting of results, considering their findings to be uncertain because of their methodological approach. However, they are presented in the checklists, making it possible for interested readers to consult their characteristics and results. Interestingly, we did not note a gradual improvement of the quality scores by year of study, indicating that research teams did not learn from each other’s ‘mistakes’. The methodological approach seemed to be an aspect that was inherent in the individual research teams.
Definitions of primary prevention
Our review was somewhat limited from the lack of specific definitions of PP in most studies, which could have resulted in misclassifications, in particular in relation to wellness. We did not feel it fair to include a quality criterion on this issue unless the main topic of the survey was prevention, but even when this was the primary aim of the study, the descriptions of PP were vague and did not allow us to contextualise with accuracy. This could make it difficult to decide whether study subjects and/or the research teams had a clear opinion of whether they really dealt with PP (i.e. the prevention of a condition in healthy subjects) or if they mixed it up with other types of prevention, such as prevention of recurrences or perhaps even maintenance care and also whether the activity related to public health in general or not. These problems could have been resolved if survey instruments and the specific questions had been available, but this was often not the case. However, often the context and surrounding information could remedy this weakness, such as when authors mentioned that they studied the subluxation and its link to disease, which would indicate that chiropractors endorsing this concept considered it possible to perform PP through chiropractic adjustments.
Low response rates
Another problem in the literature that made our interpretations difficult was that the response rates were (as is often the case in surveys) mainly low (below 80%) and that only few authors compared responders to non-responders. This probably (but not for sure) limits the representativeness of the study samples, assuming that there is heterogeneity among chiropractors and their patients on these issues. Although it is impossible to define a cut-point for when a response rate is too low to result in generalizability, perhaps authors and editors should consider whether surveys with response rates as low as 10% and less are worthy of reporting in the literature. Stating this, it is acknowledged that the 10% response rate cut off used in this review was arbitrarily chosen.
Methodological considerations of own survey
In relation to the various methodological considerations surrounding this review, our work was guided by a modified AMSTAR checklist [16]. One of our reviewers is experienced in performing systematic reviews and two of the reviewers are chiropractors with an insight in the concepts and jargon of this field. The systematic approach in this type of review limits but does not remove the subjective approach to data analysis and interpretation. It is possible that another team could have used other inclusion and exclusion criteria, selected a different methodological approach, or interpreted the data differently, but as the two blind reviewers agreed on every point in this review and the referee was never needed we could conclude that our approach was at least user-friendly.
However, it is possible that we failed to retrieve some relevant surveys on this topic. In the chiropractic field, some professional journals exist that are ‘invisible’ when searching through the usual library sources. We initially searched two medical databases (PubMed and Embase) later completed with Index to Chiropractic Literature and . This approach added two articles, but we could have missed out on some other relevant work, assuming that they could have been traceable through other library databases.
As we did not explicitly search the grey literature, we would have missed surveys published by such media but, probably, studies not published through the peer-review process would have a relatively low methodological standard, which would limit their usefulness. For this review, we were unable to obtain three of the articles found through the literature search, which, potentially, were lost from the review. Nevertheless, it is unlikely that (at the most) three additional articles would have markedly changed our findings.
Conclusions
Interestingly, according to this review of the chiropractic literature, more research efforts have been put into wellness than into prevention of musculoskeletal disorders or public health-related disorders such as cardiovascular disease. It therefore seems that parts of the chiropractic profession are in search of an understanding of various aspects of clinical practice over and above its traditional musculoskeletal role.
Although it is possible that PP is provided as a natural element during the course of treatment – and hence not discovered through surveys asking for reason for consulting, it is clear that only a small proportion of chiropractic patients consult for PP, despite the readiness of the profession to offer such services.
Future directions
If chiropractors wish to provide more PP to their patients, it would be necessary to review the literature on the effectiveness of this approach in relation to musculoskeletal prevention and wellness. It is quite possible that this will reveal a dearth of relevant information, which in turn should incite interested chiropractors to encourage well designed clinical studies on these topics.
Abbreviations
PP = Primary Prevention
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge Stanley Innes and Alexandre Boutet for their help with the literature search, Charlène Chéron editorial assistance.
Authors’ contributions
All authors helped to plan the review. GG and CLY established the search strategies, checklists and reviewed the articles blindly. GG performed the first selection of articles and was assisted by CLY when screening abstracts and texts. GG and CLY interpreted the findings. GG wrote the first draft. CLY critically reviewed all aspects of the work and all authors participated in completing the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Competing interest
The authors report that they have no competing interests.
One of the authors (CLY) was co-author on one of the reviewed articles. However, a third person reviewed that article. CLY is a senior editorial adviser to the journal Chiropractic & Manual Therapies but played no part in the peer review of the submission.
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