What Is Chiropractic

Understanding Chiropractic Therapy

Chiropractic therapy is an alternative healthcare approach that focuses on disorders of the musculoskeletal system. Unlike traditional medical treatment, which often relies on medication or surgery, chiropractors utilize hands-on manipulation of the problem area, with a primary focus on the spine. Through various techniques, chiropractic therapists can effectively reduce or eliminate pain from many parts of the body, particularly the spine.

Holistic Approach to Medicine

Chiropractic therapy is often referred to as a “holistic” approach to medicine because it treats not only the symptoms presented but also the body as a whole. While spinal adjustment is the most common treatment used, chiropractors may employ a variety of techniques to address joints and muscle tissues throughout the body.

Historical Roots

The use of spinal manipulation for medicinal purposes dates back over 3000 years to ancient Chinese writings. Hippocrates, known as the “father of medicine,” also utilized manipulative techniques, as did ancient Egyptians and many other cultures. A resurgence of interest in manipulative therapy occurred in the late 19th century in North America with the emergence of osteopathic medicine and chiropractic medicine.

Mainstream Recognition

Spinal manipulation gained mainstream recognition during the 1980s. This technique, also known as spinal adjustment, involves various hands-on methods to manipulate, massage, mobilize, adjust, stimulate, apply traction to, or otherwise influence the spine and related tissues. It is the most common and primary intervention used in chiropractic care. In North America, chiropractors perform over 90% of all manipulative treatments, with the remaining balance provided by osteopathic medicine, physical therapy, and naturopathic medicine.

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Chiropractic therapy offers a natural and holistic approach to managing musculoskeletal disorders and promoting overall health and well-being. Whether you're seeking relief from back pain, neck pain, or joint discomfort, chiropractic therapy may provide effective solutions tailored to your individual needs.

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Majority in U.S. say chiropractic works for neck, back pain.

According to a new Gallup report commissioned by Palmer College of Chiropractic, 33.6 million U.S. adults (14 percent) seek chiropractic care each year. More than half of all U.S. adults have visited a chiropractor, and more than one quarter of them would choose chiropractic care first for back or neck pain. Want to learn more?

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Taking A Natural Systemic Approach To Healing

Chiropractic is an overall way of looking at the human body. It’s based on the idea that the body is self-sustaining and self-healing. The body is in essence completely controlled by the brain through its connection via the spinal cord and the vast networks of nerves that make up the body. When this system is not functioning at its peak, the overall performance of the human body is lacking.

In the chiropractic world, drugs and medicine are not utilized as a form of treating a patient. While supplementation and nutrition are almost always a part of the bigger picture, drugs and prescriptions can be viewed as band-aids to treat symptoms rather than going to the source and treating the real problem.

While it’s often perceived that the chiropractor is solely here to treat back and neck pain, this is simply a small piece of what the profession really is capable of handling. Chiropractors not only treat soft and hard tissue problems such as sciatica and joint pain, but are largely called on to deal with more significant issues. Some of these issues include fibromyalgia, allergies, insomnia, headaches and many more.

Is Chiropractic Safe?

One way to measure safety is to look at the malpractice fees for a practitioner. Those for chiropractors are extremely small (a few thousand dollars annually). Another, of course, is to review the literature. The literature is clear in review after review, that the adverse reactions are minor and resolve within a day or two. The more serious risks have been overstated by a number of zealous medical practitioners who, with the best of intentions, have called attention to a stroke issue following manipulation. The reality, as revealed in two recent publications in Spine is that what appeared to be a causal relationship due to the timing of seeing a chiropractor and subsequent stroke was, in fact, due to being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

A study by Cassidy, et al. revealed that patients who were in dissection developed severe neck or headache pain. These patients then sought attention from not only chiropractors but medical doctors. As a result, the “risk” of stroke was equal or even greater for patients seeing an MD prior to their documented stroke. This, of course, was not due to what the MD did to the patient but because the patient was already in the process of having a dissection; the same for chiropractors. The doctor visit is not a “risk” but an association in time

What’s inside

Facts & Myths Surrounding Cervical Dissection and Cervical Manipulative Therapy-Dr. Christine Goertz:

Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) Education And Training

The Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE), a division of the U.S. Department of Education, requires at least 3 years of college prior to acceptance, with certain required hours in science, into any CCE approved college of Chiropractic. Prior to entry into chiropractic college, about 80% of students had a four-year college degrees.

Although much of the education is very similar, there are some significant differences between doctors of chiropractic and doctors of medicine. Chiropractors focus on the body’s natural ability to get well and stay well. Medical doctors are very aware of this inherent capacity, but their approach to patient complaints generally involves reliance on medication or surgery. Chiropractors, on the other hand, do not use drugs or surgery in their approach to patients. Instead, they focus on the assessing the patient’s spine and lifestyle including diet, exercise, sleep, stress-relieving activities, etc. as the sources of healing.

The main approach to treatment for a doctor of chiropractic is assessment and manipulation of the spine and extremities. In the event that the patient’s problem appears to be beyond the body’s ability to heal itself, chiropractors refer to various medical specialists.