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Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
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Chiropractic Joins the
Mainstream
From the April 4, 2002 issue of the New York Daily News
comes a story with a headline that reads, "The
Conventional Alternative Once on the fringe,
chiropractic joins the medical mainstream." The story in
essence reports that chiropractic care is gaining
mainstream acceptance even in the medical community. The
story reports on several individuals who tout the
benefits they have received from chiropractic care.
One such proponent is New York-based opera singer
Frederick Burchinal who can spend entire evenings bent
over in the role of a hunchback. He expands upon his
problems by saying, "They are aches and problems that,
if let alone, could escalate into other kinds of
illness, in the sinus! flu! stomach problems!" He
continues, "I am much healthier now. Sometimes I go away
for two or three months, for work, and I notice I start
to feel not at peak performance. Then I have one or two
sessions with my chiropractor, and I am right back in
form."
The article also hears from Dr. James Dillard, an M.D.,
acupuncturist, chiropractor and head of Oxford Health
Plans' alternative medicine program. He says, "There has
been a shift." For a long time, the medical
establishment "wanted chiropractic to go away." "Now,
the demand is so loud that HMOs and PPOs and other
convoluted arrangements under managed care are
recognizing that they must provide coverage." In fact,
says Dillard, "States with insurance equality [laws]
actually require third-party payers not to discriminate
against chiropractors."
The article suggests that it is the patient responses
that have actually gotten the medical and insurance
community to be more responsive to chiropractic. The
article also suggests that one of the reasons is,
"Chiropractors seem more caring, as a group, than many
traditional, time-pressed doctors." Additionally the
article reports that among a group of workers with
back-related injuries, those who saw chiropractors paid
about a tenth as much and lost a tenth of the workdays
as those who went to medical doctors. They also reported
on other published studies from 1997 to 2001 that showed
chiropractic helps tension and migraine headaches and
ear infections. In a Minnesota study, children with
asthma had fewer severe attacks after regular
adjustments. The results are that 30 million people seek
some form of chiropractic care each year.
Chiropractic is even finding its way into hospital
programs. John Weeks, a complementary medicine expert
who works with insurance companies says, "These days,
chiropractic is key — the backbone, in fact — to many of
the 125 hospital-based integrative medicine programs up
and running in 2001. Finding a way to successfully
integrate chiropractic" into hospital programs like Beth
Israel's is "critical" in making them work financially." |
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