April 2007
see also: WCA
letters to the BBC
WCA rebukes BBC for biased report
The World Chiropractic
Alliance (WCA) contacted the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) after
learning of its planned investigative report on chiropractors accused of
fraud for correcting subluxations. The doctors are among a small but growing
number of DCs in the United Kingdom
who no longer call themselves "chiropractors" because of the way the term is
being used in that country. Instead, they identify themselves as Spinal
Specialists who focus on the detection and correction of vertebral
subluxations and do not offer medical services to patients.
The BBC report was
apparently spurred by complaints by members of the GCC (General Chiropractic
Council, the UK's government body) and the British Chiropractic Association
(BCA), a member of the World Federation of Chiropractic.
In a process similar to
one used by the popular US news program, "60 Minutes," the BBC news
department sent three patients to GCC member doctors for examinations.
According to information received by the WCA, none were given
subluxation‑specific examinations or x‑rays, yet all were categorized as
"perfectly healthy."
The three people were
then sent to Spinal Specialist Christian Farthing, who detected subluxations
in each of them and recommended chiropractic adjustments.
Farthing attended the
University at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia and
earned a double degree in Bachelor of Applied Science (Clinical Science) and
Bachelor of Chiropractic Science. He practiced as a chiropractor in the UK
from 2000‑2001, but, after a dispute with the new GCC, his license was
suspended. He continued to provide subluxation‑corrective services as a
"spinal specialist" and was suspended for an additional three years.
He rebelled against the
medical stance of the GCC, asking: "Why should the rest of the world benefit
from spinal correction and wellness care, but not the UK? Why should the UK
miss out? Put simply, this is what they want to occur in Britain."
In 2003, he opened the
Ideal Spine Centre and became a Distinguished Fellow of CBP for Clinical and
Spinal Biomechanics. He is currently working closely with the international
program 'The Wellness Practice' and Dr. James Chestnut from Canada. Farthing
is also the leading author of the book, "The World's Best Kept Health Secret
Revealed."
He is not alone in
walking away from the GCC and BCA since both organizations fail to recognize
the traditional non‑medical view of chiropractic and repeatedly discriminate
against and harass subluxation‑centered doctors. Although purporting to be
"chiropractic" organizations, the word "subluxation" does not appear on
either group's website. The BCA defines chiropractic in medical terms as a
treatment of "conditions that are due to problems with the joints,
ligaments, tendons and nerves of the body, particularly those of the spine."
In its second letter to
the BBC, the WCA protested the reporter's reliance on BCA doctors to make
chiropractic determinations. Writing for the WCA, President Terry A.
Rondberg, DC, told the BBC reporter that her repeated references to the
"three perfectly healthy people" in the investigation "clearly indicates a
misconception about what it means to be 'healthy.'"
He went on to explain
that, "Most people think being 'healthy' means a lack of symptoms. If you
aren't in pain at the moment, or aren't exhibiting some outward sign of a
disease, you are 'healthy.' But, according to the World Health Organization,
health is 'a state of complete physical, mental, and social well being and
not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.'"
He added: "The
practitioners who examined the three individuals did not conduct
chiropractic examinations geared to detecting vertebral subluxations. How
can they ‑‑ or you ‑‑ state categorically the three subjects were 'perfectly
healthy?' The doctors who worked with you on this report also probably did
not conduct examinations for such ailments as pre‑diabetes, ovarian cancer,
heart disease or hepatitis C, all of which are commonly called 'silent
killers' and require specialized medical diagnostic procedures. If one of
these three people has any of these problems, would you still call them
'perfectly healthy' simply because the doctors you hired to examine them
failed to find anything?
"The only thing that
can be said decisively about the three people used in your investigative
report," Rondberg continued, "is that the examinations they were given did
not uncover any medical problems. However, until they went to Dr. Farthing,
they had not been tested for vertebral subluxations. There are thousands of
chiropractors around the world who focus solely on detecting and correcting
vertebral subluxations. The fact that the doctors you chose to aid in your
BBC report did not find them speaks volumes about their position outside the
mainstream of the global chiropractic community."
The truth of that
statement is supported by a 2006 survey of British chiropractors, the vast
majority of whom said they had no confidence in the GCC to regulate the
profession.
The World Chiropractic
Alliance also countered other criticisms leveled at Farthing and
subluxation‑centered chiropractors in the UK, including accusations that
offering pre‑payment wellness care plans were unethical and that x‑rays
should never be given in a chiropractic office.
At press time, it was
not known whether the BBC would air the investigative report or if it would
include information received from the WCA.
"We sincerely hope the
BBC upholds its high journalistic standards and realizes that it is being
manipulated by the anti‑chiropractic forces at work in Britain," stated Dr.
Rondberg. "The GCC and BCA are working hand in hand with the World
Federation of Chiropractic to change the entire definition of chiropractic,
to turn the profession into a medical therapy that distances itself from the
traditional purpose of chiropractic. We are seeing this happen in other
WFC
groups and subluxation‑centered doctors around the globe have to unite in
our opposition to the WFC organizations if we want to preserve the unique
identity of our profession. If we don't, doctors of chiropractic will end up
being nothing more than second‑rate osteopaths who manipulate the spine to
treat back pain in adults. What a loss that would be to the world!"