February 2004
TV documentary on chiropractic and addictions to air in Feb.
Features same torque release program
being taught at WCA 2004 Summit
A documentary on the
role of chiropractic in drug rehabilitation programs will be rebroadcast on
the Discovery Health Network cable system Feb. 20, 2004. The program first
aired in May 2002 and was show several times throughout the summer and fall
seasons.
The segment, titled
"Wiped Out," and is part of the "Lifeline" series, which presents news of
the latest medical and health related breakthroughs. The "Lifeline" series
is a Discovery Channel original programming series and is featured on
Discovery's website.
The Medical Review
Board at Discovery Health chose to produce the program after a research
project by Jay M. Holder, D.C., on Torque Release Technique (TRT) appeared
in the journal, Molecular Psychiatry. The journal, published by
NATURE, is rated second out of 80 journals in psychiatry, 10th out of
201 journals in neurosciences and 20th out of 295 journals in biochemistry
and molecular biology according to Journal Citation Reports, which
rates peer‑reviewed journals.
The television
documentary examines the role of the subluxation in addictions and
compulsive disorders as well as methods invented and used by Dr. Holder at
his Exodus
Treatment Center in Miami Beach.
When Holder performed
the first government‑funded study in auriculotherapy to determine its
outcome in addiction patients, he discovered that auriculotherapy could
electronically detect the level and listing side of the subluxation, as well
as discovering the limbic system point.
This led him to
collaborate with researchers in human genetics and neuropharmacology in
support of the Brain Reward Cascade theory, and help establish the Reward
Deficiency Syndrome (RDS) as a biogenic model.
The Brain Reward
Cascade and RDS explain how persons can manifest a deficiency in their state
of well‑being, which interferes in their potential and quality of life. This
work was eventually published in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs.
Although RDS is
estimated to be as high as 30% of the general population, persons suffering
from addiction best represent RDS, as RDS is responsible for most addictions
and compulsive disorders. The five addictions include work, eating
disorders, sex, gambling and drugs. Compulsive disorders include Attention
Deficit Disorder, ADHD and Tourette's Syndrome.
Because of this,
Holder, who was served on the faculty at the University of
Miami
teaching pharmacology, chose this population to measure the outcome of
subluxation‑based chiropractic in a randomized, blinded and placebo
controlled clinical trial.
Bob Duncan, Ph.D., and
Biostatistition at the University of Miami School of Medicine, designed the
study.
When the Discovery
Channel contacted Holder, he was skeptical. "I asked why they wanted to do a
program on chiropractic. Their response was that they were excited about
chiropractic's role for something other than neck and low back pain. I
certainly agreed and felt that although musculoskeletal conditions do well
under chiropractic care, the last thing we needed was another study on neck
and low back pain," said Holder. "It's time to move on, and support with
sound scientific research, the true broad‑based scope of chiropractic
practice, which lies in subluxation care providing fulfillment of human
potential, state of well‑being and quality of life."
Holder added, "I, and
others, were always warned by certain leaders in our profession that if
research on chiropractic were to be accepted by the main stream scientific
community and ever get published in their journals, we must never invoke the
term subluxation, the 'S' word. I am proud and excited to tell you that in
both the preparation of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, as well as the
journal, Molecular Psychiatry, the powers to be, had absolutely no problem
with the 'S' word. Their problem was with the term 'chiropractic,' in that
it was not specific enough for them."
After the Miami Drug
Court's success in using auriculotherapy as an alternative to incarceration
for first offenders of drug related crimes, hundreds of drug courts were
established across the nation.
With the realization
that Drug Courts would benefit from court‑ordered chiropractic care as well,
Holder decided to prove it with a more comprehensive research design than he
used with the previous auriculotherapy study, thereby validating D.D. and
B.J. Palmer's claim that "Chiropractic would empty the prisons."
According to the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy, more people are in federal
prison for a drug‑related crime than in the active military, and the leading
cause of death and crime is drug related.
Saying that principled
chiropractic required a computer upgrade from first century linear and
mechanistic technique models, Holder developed TRT, which he describes as "a
non‑linear, tonal and vitalistic technique model," to provide a
subluxation‑based protocol to execute the study.
According to Holder,
"All chiropractic techniques work. However, they work better if they are
delivered with a non‑linear tonal model to avoid patient plateau."
At first, the research
project was to use Toggle Recoil by hand, because this method was considered
a classic in chiropractic.
However, to avoid
difficulty and anticipated concerns in statistically measuring the hands,
research design flaws, and interprofessional reproducibility, Holder was
obliged to invent a device that totally reproduced what the hands were
intended to perform in providing the Toggle Recoil thrust.
Both the device known
as the Integrator, and Torque Release Technique were created for the sole
purpose of conducting the study.
Holder notes that the
Integrator was the first adjusting instrument to apply for an FDA 510K,
which was granted in 1995. That made the FDA the second U.S. Government
agency, after Medicare, to recognize the subluxation, in that this 510K's
indication is for the "safe and effective correction of the vertebral
subluxation."
The Discovery Health
Channel production is the first non‑agenda chiropractic documentary ever to
be released on a major network, Holder states. "This is a big break for
chiropractors and their patients everywhere. Our success was made possible
by the support, vision and direction of many special people and
organizations, such as the Florida Chiropractic Society and the World
Chiropractic Alliance," he explained.
Holder is the Chairman
of the World Chiropractic Alliance Council on Addictions and Compulsive
Disorders, President of the American College of Addictionology and
Compulsive Disorders. For more information contact the Holder Research
Institute at: 305/535‑8803 or visit their website: www.torquerelease.com