The Guidelines for Chiropractic Quality
Assurance and Practice Parameters (Mercy Guidelines)
The Guidelines for Chiropractic Quality Assurance and Practice
Parameters, more commonly known as the Mercy Guidelines, were developed
in 1993 by a 35-member commission initially "sponsored" by the
Congress of Chiropractic State Associations (COCSA).
It is the position of the World Chiropractic Alliance (WCA) that no
set of guidelines should be interpreted as a "standard of
care" or be used by state licensing boards, chiropractic
organizations, insurance companies, courts of law, or any other entity,
to regulate or judge the practice decisions of any doctor of
chiropractic. Instead, such guidelines are to be used only to assist
doctors of chiropractic in providing the highest quality care to
patients or to help non-chiropractors understand the scope and purpose
of chiropractic. In addition, chiropractic guidelines should be the
result of extensive input from the profession at large and address the
primary purpose of chiropractic, the analysis and correction of
subluxations.
By any of these standards, The Mercy document fails completely
and is categorically rejected by the WCA. It is the position of the
WCA that the Mercy Guidelines should not be used by any practicing
doctor of chiropractic nor by any government, health care
organization, insurance company or other party. In particular, the WCA
condemns the use of the Mercy document by independent medical or
chiropractic examiners as a means by which to judge the "medical
necessity" of any care provided by a doctor of chiropractic.
Among the specific reasons for the WCA’s rejection of Mercy are:
The Mercy
document restricts chiropractic to the treatment of low-back pain in
adults. The WCA strongly promotes the use of chiropractic as an integral
part of a total health and wellness regimen, suitable for all people --
from infancy to old age -- and regardless of the presence or absence of
symptoms.
The Mercy
document is easily interpreted as setting limits on the number of visits
a patient should reasonably have with a doctor of chiropractic. It is
the position of the WCA that each case -- like each person -- is unique
and the determination of the duration of care should be a decision made
by the doctor and patient.
The
methodology of the Mercy conference was flawed. (See
also the detailed examination of the methodological and application
problems associated with Mercy.)
The Mercy
conference was developed in a closed session by 35 panel members without
input from the profession at large. No explanation was given as to how
these 35 individuals were selected. A review of the people on the
commission reveals an extremely heavy bias toward the more medicalized
faction of the profession, despite the fact that it represents a
minority of the profession as a whole. Only a few subluxation-based
chiropractors were invited to participate and at least two afterward
stated publicly that they felt they were included as "token"
representatives but had no real affect on the proceedings.
The Mercy
document was rushed into the hands of the insurance industry before most
doctors of chiropractic had been given a chance to review it. Almost
immediately, several members of the commission began marketing seminars,
books and other merchandise about the document, raising serious
questions regarding conflict of interest. The financial incentive of
several members of the commission to profit from the acceptance of the
guidelines throws significant suspicion on the motives behind their
development and distribution.
The Mercy
document was published in 1993 as a working document to be updated and
revised. It has never been updated and, in June 2000, the California
Chiropractic Association, which had contributed to the conference and
was one of the few organizations to give the guidelines a provisional
endorsement, passed a resolution ending its support, saying the document
"no longer represents the present state of scientific
evidence."
Further, major
funding for the commission was derived by companies owned by commission
members or having direct ties to those members, adding another layer of
economic involvement to the picture. Many of these companies were able
to financially benefit from the findings of the conference and
undoubtedly their financial aid had an influence on the outcome.
The Mercy
document has been rejected by almost every chiropractic organization on
national, state and local levels, including the organizations which
initially sponsored it. Organizations and state boards which have
rejected or withdrawn endorsement of the Mercy Guidelines document
include:
 | Alabama State Chiropractic Association |
 | Alaska Chiropractic Society |
 | Arizona Association of Chiropractic |
 | Arizona Chiropractic Council |
 | Arkansas State Board of Chiropractic Examiners |
 | Association for Chiropractors of Greater Washington (D.C.) |
 | California Chiropractic Association |
 | Chiropractic Federation of New York |
 | Chiropractic Society of Texas |
 | Colorado Chiropractic Association |
 | Congress of Chiropractic State Associations |
 | Connecticut Chiropractic Council |
 | Empire State (New York) Chiropractic Association |
 | Florida Chiropractic Society |
 | Georgia Board of Chiropractic Examiners |
 | International Chiropractors Association |
 | International Chiropractors Association of Indiana |
 | Kansas Chiropractic Association |
 | Kentucky Association of Chiropractors |
 | Maryland Chiropractic Association |
 | Massachusetts Chiropractic Society |
 | Michigan Chiropractic Council |
 | Minnesota Chiropractic Association |
 | Mississippi Associated Chiropractors, Inc. |
 | Nevada Chiropractic Association |
 | New York Chiropractic Council |
 | New Jersey Board of Chiropractic Examiners |
 | Oklahoma State Board of Chiropractic Examiners |
 | Pennsylvania ChiroFORUM |
 | Pennsylvania Academy of Chiropractic Physicians |
 | Washington State Chiropractic Association |
 | Washington State Chiropractic Disciplinary Board |
In addition, the Mercy document has been ruled inadmissible as
evidence for testimony on a soft tissue injury (Reeves vs. Flaherty, et
al. Expert testimony by Robert Martines, D.C., Santa Clara Superior
Court, March 1999; citation: Case # CV758647 Santa Clara County Eva
Sue Reaves VS. David Flaherty)
Finally, a
survey conducted by The Chiropractic Journal revealed that chiropractors
around the country have overwhelmingly rejected adoption of the Mercy
Guidelines.
For these reasons, and others not detailed in this paper, the World
Chiropractic Alliance rejects The Guidelines for Chiropractic Quality
Assurance and Practice Parameters and calls for its developers to
publicly withdraw their support of this document as well.