February 2005
see also:
Fla. chiropractic college under fire
and
Dr. McCoy responds to
slam on JVSR research
Should we change chiropractic to please the MDs?
by Dr. Terry A. Rondberg
If the medical
contingent at Florida State University has its way, the school's proposed
College of Chiropractic
will never become a reality. They think having a school teach such an
"unscientific" discipline on their campus will somehow sully their
reputation. Studying chiropractic, to them, has about as much value as
studying the whereabouts of Bigfoot.
In interviews and
letters circulated widely in the media and on the internet, these medical
bigots have demonstrated their ignorance and narrow‑mindedness. They are
driven by fear and greed and personify everything that is wrong with the
medical profession.
So, along with many
other chiropractors, I find myself opposing the school ‑‑ although for
vastly different reasons than the medical community.
The fact is, the
presence of a chiropractic college at FSU won't damage the medical
profession but it will do great and permanent harm to our own profession.
That's because the chiropractic college proposed for the state school will
NOT teach chiropractic, but some perverted amalgam designed primarily to
appease the medical community.
According to
information provided by FSU leaders, the school will compromise the basic
tenets of chiropractic and be in direct opposition to the principles of
chiropractic agreed upon by all other chiropractic college presidents when
they signed and endorsed the ACC (Association of Chiropractic Colleges)
Position Paper on chiropractic.
That document,
subsequently endorsed by nearly every chiropractic organization, states
that:
Chiropractic is a
health care discipline which emphasizes the inherent recuperative power of
the body to heal itself without the use of drugs or surgery
‑‑ and ‑‑
Chiropractic is
concerned with the preservation and restoration of health, and focuses
particular attention on the subluxation.
If an FSU "College of
Chiropractic Medicine"
(and I have no doubt they'll manage to get the term 'medicine' in the name)
is ever started, it's unlikely that the word "subluxation" will ever be
uttered except in a derogatory context. In fact, school officials don't even
think the DC degree is worth anything by itself. Instead, according to FSU
Provost Larry Abele, the school will offer only joint degrees, with
chiropractic being combined with a master's degree in one of five areas:
aging studies, food and nutrition, movement science, health policy, or
public health.
That's also the plan
put forth by Alan Adams, DC, who's been hired as the principle consultant to
help form the new school and who appears in line to be its first dean. Dr.
Adams is the former vice‑president of the Southern California University of
Health Sciences, which used to be called Los Angeles College of Chiropractic
before it decided to distance itself from the very word chiropractic.
I think Samuel Homola,
arch chiropractic critic, summarized the situation when he stated recently
on an internet mailing list:
"... a science‑based
chiropractic college with a new approach and a new definition of
chiropractic, associated with a major university, may force changes that
will reduce the number of subluxation‑based chiropractors, which would be a
change for the better. But if this means duplication of services that
could be provided by physical therapists and other health‑care
providers, is a new chiropractic college really necessary?" (emphasis added)
That's just the point.
To become accepted by FSU (which is dominated by the medical profession and
receives millions of dollars in royalties from the drug industry) would
require us to "re‑define" ‑‑ or more accurately distort ‑‑ the entire
premise of chiropractic.
Naturally, Homola
believes it to be a change for the better, but even he recognizes that doing
so will mean turning DCs into nothing more than physical therapists or
medical technicians. A new chiropractic college won't be necessary and
neither will chiropractors. We'll become irrelevant in the health care
system and pass away into oblivion.
It's clear from this
entire Florida fiasco that there are two things we must do, not only if we
are to survive as a separate profession, but assume the mantle of health
care leadership in the coming decades.
First, we must
safeguard our unique identity as non‑medical, subluxation‑centered wellness
providers. We can't merely be one of a slew of practitioners offering spinal
manipulation for neuromusculoskeletal disorders. Subluxation correction is
the one thing we do that no one else does, and this will be
the key to bringing patients into our office and helping them lead healthier
lives without drugs and surgery.
Second, we must
absolutely inundate our critics with valid, incontrovertible scientific
research that will finally and completely silence those who continue to
claim we are an unscientific profession. People like attorney Jann Bellamy
(a relative perhaps of orthopedic surgeon Dr. Ray Bellamy who is leading the
attack on the FSU campus?) who recently said in an editorial for The
Tallahassee Democrat that:
"While chiropractic
employs the language of medicine ‑‑ physician, diagnosis, subluxation, board
certification, for example ‑‑ at present the hard science behind
chiropractic practice is between slim and nonexistent. This is partly
because, as a consultant's report commissioned by FSU itself points out,
chiropractors have never rigorously researched their methods."
We need to rigorously
research our methods ‑‑ and the results we obtain with them. Publications
like the Journal of Vertebral Subluxation Research are already
disseminating some of this research, and programs like the newly founded RCS
(Research & Clinical Science) provide the means to conduct studies on a
massive scale. They are leading the charge in defense of chiropractic and
soon we'll have the scientific evidence to validate chiropractic subluxation
correction in all its aspects.
We have to hold on. We
can't wave the white flag now, just to be able to say we've been allowed to
open a college at a state university. Not when we're so close to
victory.