March 2004
Addiction certification program begins 13th year
B.J. Palmer spoke and
wrote of the effectiveness of chiropractic in aiding the addicted person.
The Board‑Certified Addictionologist Program, beginning its 13th year on
March 27, 2004 in Las Vegas, brings subluxation‑based chiropractic full
circle.
Upon completion of the
150‑hour program ‑‑ consisting of 10 modules, one weekend a month for 10
months ‑‑ the Certified Addictionologist (C.Ad.) credential is granted.
Participants may begin with any module at any time, and take the modules in
any order, at any location.
The American College of
Addictionology & Compulsive Disorders (ACACD) has graduated approximately
1,000 chiropractors. It has helped position D.C.s and other professionals
with Board Certification as primary intervention resources for our country's
top cause of death and crime (more than 50 million people are affected by
the disease of addictions and compulsive disorders).
A research study funded
by the Florida Chiropractic Society conducted at Exodus
Addiction Hospital with Dr. Robert
Duncan of the University of Miami School of Medicine, clearly showed the
effectiveness of subluxation‑based chiropractic in the treatment of
addiction.
The project was the
first research done on a human population by randomized clinical trial
demonstrating subluxation‑based chiropractic's efficacy for state of
well‑being. The project also showed that chiropractic has little or no
placebo effect, a long‑standing criticism of our detractors.
The Journal of
Psychoactive Drugs, a world leading peer‑reviewed medical journal, published
a landmark paper on "Reward Deficiency Syndrome," which introduces the role
of subluxation correction in addiction and compulsive disorders.
In February, 2001,
Molecular Psychiatry, rated second in the world among medical journals and
published by Nature magazine, published the success achieved in addiction
treatment through correction of the subluxation, using Torque Release
Technique. This achievement was honored by a Discovery Channel documentary,
and will be aired again this year as well
It is estimated that up
to 20% of our nation's population suffers from the disease of addiction.
Since recovery and recovering individuals require total avoidance of all
mood‑altering substances, chiropractic is the primary intervention resource
in such cases.
According to ACACD
Program Coordinator Michael Davis, D.C., C.Ad., "Addiction is a
multifactorial disease having psychological, genetic, metabolic and
spiritual components. The most significant mechanism of this disease process
is manifest through neurophysiological insult within the dorsal horn of the
spinal cord as expressed in the 'Brain Reward Cascade Model,' which aligns
itself with the known causes of the vertebral subluxation."
The cost of drug
addiction to the nation ‑‑ in dollars, loss of productivity, death and the
breakdown of the family unit ‑‑ is staggering. Despite spending millions of
dollars, the government and others involved in the "war against drugs" have
found themselves fighting a losing battle.
This is due, in large
part, to the lack of meaningful education and training offered to the
medical profession. Also, the available medical treatment tool,
pharmacological intervention, is contraindicated in addiction cases, since
patients require drug‑free treatment. For this reason, the chiropractic
profession may represent the best hope of effectively helping the millions
of people affected by this disease. Four hundred drug courts throughout the
nation embrace alternative sentencing and are beginning to include
chiropractic care.
The Board Certification
Program and Credential (C.Ad.) offered by the ACACD is approved/certified
by: the State of New York, Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services
(OASAS); the Florida Certification Board (FCB); and the Israel Certification
Board ‑‑ member boards of the International Certification & Reciprocity
Consortium (ICRC); and the State of Nevada Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Abuse
(BADA). The ICRC provides reciprocity services to approximately 41 U.S.
states, Canada, and five foreign countries, as well as all branches of the
U.S. military, and Indian Health Services.
Until recently, use of
the title "Addictionologist" was limited to physicians, thereby defining
Addictionologist as physician‑level Board Certification.
The ACACD is the only
national educational initiative to offer the C.Ad. training that grants the
C.Ad. designation to all the professionals, and the only program that
certifies D.C.s in the field of addiction and compulsive disorders.
The program ‑‑
co‑sponsored by Springfield College,
Springfield Mass. ‑‑ satisfies the
requirement for advanced certification for D.C.s participating in managed
care programs when Board Certification is required.
Starting this month,
the program will also be held in Melbourne,
Australia. The Royal Melbourne
Phillip & Preston Institutes and RMIT University (CARPP), now make a team of
six prestigious co‑sponsors. Australia's drug courts will be providing
Torque Release Technique to their offenders this year.
For more information on
this program, call 800/490‑7714 or 305/535‑8803, or visit the American
College of Addictionology & Compulsive Disorders online at www.ACACD.com.