May 2005
Dept. of Defense names Rondberg to committee
T
erry
A. Rondberg, DC, president of the World Chiropractic Alliance (WCA) and
publisher of The Chiropractic Journal, has been invited to serve on
the Department of Defense (DoD) Chiropractic Advisory Committee, which will
help establish the protocol for making chiropractic services available to
active duty military personnel.
In extending the
invitation, Richard A. Mayo, deputy director of the Office of the Assistant
Secretary of Defense/Health Affairs, told Rondberg, "I believe you will be
able to contribute advice and recommendations regarding the continued
development and implementation of an effective program of chiropractic
health care benefits for members of the uniformed services on active duty."
"The World Chiropractic
Alliance has worked closely with Congressional and military leadership for
years to make sure chiropractic is available to active duty military
personnel as well as to our nation's veterans," Rondberg stated. "This will
be a great opportunity for the organization to continue its effort to ensure
that chiropractic is not limited to neuromusculoskeletal conditions or
restricted through the use of a medical gatekeeper system."
One of the primary
concerns for Rondberg is the possibility that the DoD will institute a
gatekeeper procedure similar to the one recommended for the Veterans Affairs
Health System, which requires a medical referral, or "consultation" in order
for most veterans to receive chiropractic care. The WCA vigorously fought
that recommendation but it passed when the majority of the VA Advisory
Committee ‑‑ including members from the American Chiropractic Association ‑‑
voted in favor of it. It later became evident that the anti‑chiropractic
attitude of many MDs in the VA would make it nearly impossible for veterans
to see chiropractors. "I hope we have learned from that fiasco," Rondberg
stated, "and work together as a profession to make sure members of the Armed
Forces have the same right as all citizens to see a doctor of chiropractic
without getting a referral from a medical provider."
The other major goal
for Rondberg is to seek inclusion of chiropractic care for subluxation
correction as a part of the chiropractic services offered to military
personnel under the DoD program. "I think it is important that DCs be
allowed to provide care for those suffering from any and all
neuromusculoskeletal conditions, but it is equally important that the men
and women who serve in our military be permitted to benefit from the unique
chiropractic service of subluxation correction, which can have a direct
impact on their general health and well being."
Rondberg's inclusion in
the DoD committee is the latest in a series of top‑level appointments for
WCA members, including:
*** Veronica
Gutierrez, a member of the WCA Board of Directors, the only chiropractor to
serve on the White House Special Commission on Complementary and Alternative
Medicine;
*** Christopher Kent,
DC, a member of the WCA Board of Directors, chairman of the NGO
(Non‑Governmental Organization) Health Committee, affiliated with the United
Nations;
*** Kristina M.
Collins, DC, a member of the WCA International Board of Governors, one of
six members appointed by the National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine to its National Advisory Council on Complementary and
Alternative Medicine;
*** Leona Fischer, DC,
a member of the WCA International Board of Governors, served on the Veterans
Affairs Chiropractic Advisory Committee and was one of only two members to
vote against a medical gatekeeper system.
Also invited to join
was Michael McLean, a member of the International Chiropractors
Association's Board of Directors. The names of other committee members were
not available at press time.