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Office Hours: |
Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
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Maintenance Chiropractic
Care Shown to be Beneficial in Study
From the peer-reviewed scientific periodical, the
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics,
October 2004 edition, comes a study that shows that
receiving maintenance chiropractic care after initial
care helps patients continue reduction in their
disability.
The study was performed with 30 volunteers who were
suffering from long term non-specific back problems.
These volunteers were divided into two groups. The first
group received intensive chiropractic care consisting of
12 visits for one month, followed by a reduced schedule
of one visit every three weeks for 9 months after the
initial intensive care. The second group received
nothing for the first 30 days, to establish a baseline,
then received one month of initial intensive care. The
second group did not receive any reduced or maintenance
care after the initial care. The two groups were then
evaluated and compared for pain and disability.
The results showed that both groups had similar
reduction of pain and disability after the initial 30
days of chiropractic care. Additionally, both groups
maintained their reduction of pain even though only one
group had received maintenance care. However, the big
difference was that only those individuals who were in
the group that received the 9 months of maintenance care
were able to maintain their reduction in disability. The
group that did not receive maintenance care was able to
keep their reduction in pain, but they did return to the
same levels of general disability that they were
experiencing prior to the initial chiropractic care.
Disability was measured using a scientifically designed
questionnaire that looked at 10 items addressing
different aspects of functional capacities. This
questionnaire, known as the "Oswestry Disability Index"
is the accepted method used to measure a person's
function as related to their daily activities. In this
study, only the group that continued to receive
chiropractic care every three weeks was able to maintain
the functional improvement they received during the
initial care.
The authors of the study concluded, "Intensive spinal
manipulation is effective for the treatment of chronic
low back pain. This experiment suggests that maintenance
spinal manipulations after intensive manipulative care
may be beneficial to patients to maintain subjective
postintensive treatment disability levels."
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