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CHANDLER, Ariz., Aug. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- Almost since it was
founded as a separate profession in 1895, chiropractic has been under attack by
many in the medical profession. As was proven in federal court, most of the
criticism has been totally unfounded, an attempt to destroy a competing health
care field which threatens the medical monopoly in this country. In their latest
attempt to discredit chiropractic and discourage people from seeking care from
chiropractors, some proponents of allopathic medicine continue to disseminate
misleading information about a possible link between cervical adjustments and
strokes. According to the
World Chiropractic Alliance (WCA), an international advocacy organization
representing chiropractors worldwide, such misinformation is a deliberate and
unethical scare tactic which does not stand up to critical analysis. "Even if we
restrict our investigation to cervical adjustments -- which have been the focus
of many of the media and medical attacks -- the only reasonable conclusion which
can be drawn is that chiropractic adjustments do not pose any significant risk
of stroke and are remarkably safe," stated Terry A. Rondberg, D.C.,
president of the WCA and author of "Chiropractic First," a consumer
guide to chiropractic. A stroke occurs
when a blood clot blocks a blood vessel or artery, or when a blood vessel
breaks, interrupting blood flow to an area of the brain. The lack of blood
causes brain cells to die. There are nearly 750,000 first ever or recurrent
strokes each year in the U.S. and more than 150,000 deaths are directly
stroke-related. Numerous published
scientific and medical studies indicate that the incidence of a cerebrovascular
accident (CVA) or stroke is estimated at between one and three per million
adjustments. One study covered a
period of 28 years, while another involved reviewing about 110 million
chiropractic visits. The results of these studies show conclusively that the
risk of stroke from a chiropractic adjustment is so small as to be statistically
insignificant. It has been
estimated to be even less than that of "beauty parlor stroke syndrome"
-- a rare occurrence triggered when a customer leans her head back on a sink to
get her hair washed. In reality, even
the one to three incidents per million adjustments figure may be overestimated.
In some cases, spinal manipulation was blamed even if the stroke occurred days
or weeks afterwards. According to researcher Christopher Kent, D.C., "The
fact that a temporal relationship exists between two events does not mean that
one caused the other." Additionally,
medical researchers frequently misunderstand the critical differences between
specific chiropractic adjustments and cervical manipulation. Doctors of
chiropractic are highly trained in the use of the adjustment, which is the
specific application of force to help correct nerve interference. Manipulation
is the forceful passive movement of a joint beyond its active limit of motion.
Since it doesn't imply the use of precision, specificity or the correction of
nerve interference, it is not synonymous with chiropractic adjustment. Finally, many of
the cases cited by medical researchers as being "chiropractic
treatments" were actually spinal manipulations rendered by non-chiropractic
practitioners. According to a 1995
research report in the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics,
"Misuse of the literature by medical authors in discussing spinal
manipulative therapy injury," manipulations administered by a Kung Fu
practitioner, GPs, osteopaths, physiotherapists, a wife, a blind masseur, and an
Indian barber had been incorrectly attributed to chiropractors. The report
explained that, "The words chiropractic and chiropractor have been
incorrectly used in numerous publications dealing with SMT injury by medical
authors, respected medical journals and medical organizations. In many cases,
this is not accidental; the authors had access to original reports that
identified the practitioner involved as a non-chiropractor. The true incidence
of such reporting cannot be determined. Such reporting adversely affects the
reader's opinion of chiropractic and chiropractors." Even medical
researchers have had to admit that chiropractic care carries far less of a
stroke risk than medical treatment. "Indeed, most interventions by
allopathic physicians have a higher complication rate than chiropractic
interventions," said Philip Lee, M.D., a co-investigator of a research
survey presented at the American Heart Association's 19th International Joint
Conference on Stroke and Cerebral Circulation. Because of this
inaccurate reporting to the media, the World Chiropractic Alliance is calling
upon the medical establishment to provide factual data to the public and
restrain from using scare tactics in a blatant attempt to continue its
long-standing history of opposition to chiropractic and other disciplines which
threaten its monopoly on the health care system. The WCA posted its
complete position paper on strokes, including abstracts of numerous scientific
studies, on its website, http://www.worldchiropracticalliance.org/positions/stroke.htm
The World
Chiropractic Alliance is an international organization representing doctors of
chiropractic and promoting the traditional, drug-free and non-invasive form of
chiropractic as a means to correct vertebral subluxations which cause nerve
interference. The WCA is an NGO (Non-Governmental Organization) associated with
the United Nations Department of Public Information and publisher of the
peer-reviewed chiropractic research journal, "Journal of Vertebral
Subluxation Research." For more information, contact the WCA at
800-347-1011 or http://www.worldchiropracticalliance.org.
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