October 2003
WCA argues
for direct access in VA health system
The World Chiropractic
Alliance (WCA) responded quickly when it learned that the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) Chiropractic Advisory Committee report might include
a recommendation for a medical gatekeeper for chiropractic care.
The Committee's draft
report contained a provision that "Access to chiropractic care should
require referral from the patient's primary care provider or another VA
clinician who is treating the patient for the condition(s) for which
chiropractic care is indicated." The report noted that the Committee was
deeply divided on this issue, with six members favoring a referral‑only
system and five preferring a more direct form of access. Although the
report does not identify how individual members of the Committee votes on
this issue, there are six D.C.s and five M.D.s. It is assumed that the
issue was split down professional lines, with "chiropractic" member
Charles DuVall, D.C., president of the National Association of
Chiropractic Medicine, siding with the medical profession against
chiropractic.
The Committee asked for
public comments on the report and the World Chiropractic Alliance
immediately submitted a letter arguing against the recommendation.
"We vehemently oppose
the use of medical gatekeepers to control access to chiropractic
services," Terry A. Rondberg, D.C., WCA president noted. "The American
public has the freedom to choose chiropractors without referral by M.D.s;
our veterans deserve that same right. As the committee correctly points
out, anti‑chiropractic bias still exists among some M.D.s, and a patient's
right to have access to D.C.s would ultimately be determined by the
personal prejudices of his or her medical provider.
"Requiring a medical
referral to a D.C. would also be inappropriate since M.D.s receive no
training in the detection or correction of vertebral subluxation, which is
specifically mentioned under the chiropractic Scope of Practice. It would
be impracticable to give M.D.s the responsibility of determining the
appropriateness of chiropractic care when they have no training or
experience in analyzing the subluxation complex."
The WCA alerted the
profession to the objectionable provision and asked doctors to contact the
VA Committee to submit their own comments on the issue.
The World Chiropractic
Alliance also objected to the Committee's failure to include surface
electromyography and thermography to the list of chiropractic privileges,
even though two members of the Committee wanted them added to the list.
"These procedures are well accepted in the profession and constitute
appropriate chiropractic procedures," Dr. Rondberg noted in his letter on
behalf of the WCA.
The WCA did applaud
several provisions of the recommendations report, including a provision
that D.C.s be graduates of either "schools of chiropractic accredited by
the Council on Chiropractic Education Commission on Accreditation or
equivalent agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education, or
schools (including foreign schools) accepted by the licensing body of a
State, Territory, Commonwealth, or the District of Columbia as qualifying
for full or unrestricted licensure."
The Committee
recommended a broader latitude for school accreditation since, "Limiting
recognition to CCE accredited schools excludes from VA employment licensed
doctors of chiropractic who graduated from SCASA accredited schools, those
who graduated from chiropractic school prior to the creation of CCE, those
who graduated from a school of chiropractic before it achieved full CCE
accreditation status, and those who, in the future, might graduate from a
school accredited by a new chiropractic accrediting organization
recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education."
The WCA also praised
the Committee for its recommendations concerning the scope of chiropractic
practice within the VA. The draft report notes that "Doctors of
chiropractic shall provide patient evaluation and care for neuro‑musculoskeletal
conditions including the subluxation complex within the boundaries set by
state licensure, VHA privileging and the doctor's ability to demonstrate
educational training and clinical competency in the areas necessary to
provide appropriate patient care."
It also noted that
examples of neuromusculoskeletal conditions appropriate for chiropractic
care include, but are not limited, to subluxation, back pain, neck pain,
headache, and joint sprains and strains.
"The recognition of the
detection and correction of vertebral subluxation as an integral part of
the chiropractic purpose is of utmost importance," the WCA stated in its
public comments. "As the only health care professionals trained and
experienced in this unique practice objective, the inclusion of
subluxation correction underscores the unique contribution of
chiropractic, and ensures that D.C.s do not duplicate the medical services
already provided by M.D.s and other practitioners in the VA system."
The recommendations
report was the culmination of a series of meetings by the 11‑member
Committee, which was formed in order to advise the Secretary of Veterans
Affairs, on how to incorporate chiropractic into the VA health care
system.
Secretary Anthony J.
Principi appointed Committee members in August 2002. Leona Marie Fischer,
D.C., a member of the World Chiropractic Alliance International Board of
Governors (IBG), was named as a Committee member and staunchly argued for
direct access to chiropractic.
After all public
comments have been reviewed, the Committee will finalize its report and
make its official recommendations to the Secretary.