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Chiropractic: A Profession at the Crossroads
of Mainstream and Alternative Medicine.
Meeker WC, Haldeman S.
Ann Intern Med 2002 Feb 5;136(3):216-27
Palmer Center for Chiropractic Research, 741 Brady
Street, Davenport, IA 52803.
Chiropractic is a large and well-established health
care profession in the United
States. In this overview, we briefly examine the development of chiropractic
from humble and contentious beginnings to its current state at the crossroads
of alternative and mainstream medicine.
Chiropractic has taken on many of the
attributes of an established profession, improving its educational and licensing
systems and substantially increasing its market share in the past two decades.The public increasingly uses chiropractic largely
for spinal pain syndromes and appears to be highly satisfied with the results.
Of all the so-called alternative
professions, chiropractic has made the largest inroads into private and public
health care financing systems and is increasingly viewed as an effective specialty
by many in the medical profession. Much of the positive evolution of chiropractic
can be ascribed to a quarter century-long research effort focused on the core
chiropractic procedure of spinal manipulation.
This effort has helped bring
spinal manipulation out of the investigational category to become one
of the most studied
forms of conservative treatment for spinal pain. Chiropractic theory is
still controversial, but recent expansion in federal support of chiropractic
research
bodes well for further scientific development. The medical establishment
has not yet fully accepted chiropractic as a mainstream form of care.
The
next
decade should determine whether chiropractic maintains the trappings
of an alternative
health care profession or becomes fully integrated into all health care
systems.
PMID: 11827498 [PubMed - in process]

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