Research
“Patients with chronic low-back pain treated by chiropractors showed
greater improvement and satisfaction at one month than patients treated
by family physicians. Satisfaction scores were higher for chiropractic
patients. A higher proportion of chiropractic patients (56 percent vs.
13 percent) reported that their low-back pain was better or much better,
whereas nearly one-third of medical patients reported their low-back pain
was worse or much worse.”
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Nyiendo et al
(2000).
"In a Randomised controlled trial, 183 patients with neck pain were
randomly allocated to manual therapy (spinal mobilization), physiotherapy
(mainly exercise) or general practitioner care (counselling, education
and drugs) in a 52-week study. The clinical outcomes measures showed that
manual therapy resulted in faster recovery than physiotherapy and general
practitioner care. Moreover, total costs of the manual therapy-treated
patients were about one-third of the costs of physiotherapy or general
practitioner care."
British Medical Journal, Korthals-de Bos et al
(2003).
For Long-Term Low-Back Problems
"There is strong evidence that manipulation is more effective than
a placebo treatment for chronic low-back pain or than the usual care offered
by general practitioners of bed rest, analgesics and massage."
Spine,
Van Tulder and Bouter et al. (1997).
"...improvement in all patients at three years was about 29% more
in those treated by chiropractors than in those treated by the hospitals.
The beneficial effect of chiropractic on pain was particularly clear."
British
Medical Journal, Meade et al. (1995).
"Manipulative therapy and physiotherapy are better than general
practitioner and placebo treatment. Furthermore, manipulative therapy
is slightly better than physiotherapy after 12 months."
British Medical
Journal, Koes et al. (1992).
For Pain
"...patients suffering from back and/or neck complaints experience
chiropractic care as an effective means of resolving or ameliorating pain
and functional impairments, thus reinforcing previous results showing
the benefits of chiropractic treatment for back and neck pain."
Journal
of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Verhoef et al. (1997).
"...for the management of low-back pain, chiropractic care is the
most effective treatment, and it should be fully integrated into the government's
health care system."
The Manga Report (1993).
Headaches
“Cervical spine manipulation was associated with significant improvement
in headache outcomes in trials involving patients with neck pain and/or
neck dysfunction and headache.”
Duke Evidence Report, McCrory et al. (2001).
The results of this study show that spinal manipulative therapy is an
effective treatment for tension headaches. . . Four weeks after cessation
of treatment . . . the patients who received spinal manipulative therapy
experienced a sustained therapeutic benefit in all major outcomes in contrast
to the patients that received amitriptyline therapy, who reverted to baseline
values.”
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Boline et al.
(1995).
For The Elderly
"[Elderly] chiropractic users were less likely to have been hospitalised,
less likely to have used a nursing home, more likely to report a better
health status, more likely to exercise vigorously, and more likely to
be mobile in the community. In addition, they were less likely to use
prescription drugs."
Topics in Clinical Chiropractic, Coulter et al. (1996).
For Containing Costs and Getting Workers Back on the Job
“Chiropractic care appeared relatively cost-effective for the treatment
of chronic low-back pain. Chiropractic and medical care performed comparably
for acute patients. Practice-based clinical outcomes were consistent with
systematic reviews of spinal manipulative efficacy: manipulation-based
therapy is at least as good as and, in some cases, better than other therapeusis.”
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics , Haas et al.
(2005).
First contact chiropractic care for common low back conditions costs
substantially less than traditional medical treatment and "deserves
careful consideration" by managed care executives concerned with
controlling health care spending.
Medical Care, Stano and Smith (1996).
"The overwhelming body of evidence shows that chiropractic management
of low-back pain is more cost-effective than medical management, and that
"many medical therapies are of questionable validity or are clearly
inadequate."
The Manga Report (1993).
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