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Why is "Organized Medicine" Anti-Chiropractic?
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Why is “organized medicine” anti-chiropractic?  That is a good question, for it would seem that the evidence for the effectiveness, the popularity, and the interprofessional interaction between the chiropractic and medical professions is improving.

Research is affirming the efficacy of chiropractic care for a number of conditions.  In studies, Chiropractic is routinely demonstrated to be a patient-preferred treatment delivery system.  Many symptoms respond positively to chiropractic care and even seemingly unrelated health complaints may be improved as health and wellness is restored.  Chiropractic doctors and medical doctors are working more closely and chiropractic schools have, for years, worked with medical schools here in Texas.

The number of patients who chose to visit a chiropractic doctor doubled between 1982 and 2002, and it is estimated that ten-percent of all Americans have seen a chiropractor in the past year.  For those interested in numbers, that is nearly 31 MILLION Americans, and this doesn’t include the population from other countries of the world who provide chiropractic care, the latest of which is the government of Ghana, Africa, which is announcing that it is for including chiropractic education in their medical schools in order to promote a “health and wellness revolution.”

Yet the self-proclaimed “organized medicine” in the United States of America is routinely “anti-chiropractic.”  They routinely debase the chiropractic profession, they actively seek exclusion of chiropractic doctors and others.  They frequently deny our scientific research as “less than valid,” or overlook it altogether.  They frequently bring litigation, and legislation, to advance their personal agendas to the exclusion of everyone else--as is their right to do

The frequent hypocrisy of it all, however, is that of their presumption  1) that theirs is the “only” means of “real” health care, 2) that they are the “only” providers of health care, 3) that their opinion is always in the public’s welfare, and 4) that as the majority, they ALWAYS rule.  I use the word "rule" intentionally for they appear not to seek to prevail, they seek to “rule”--a law or principle that operates within a particular sphere of knowledge, describing or prescribing what is possible or allowable; control of or dominion over an area or people. 

“Organized medicine” would presume to control and define what is permissible.  They would establish the practice of ALL practitioners in their own image, but, as we have seen with the TMA v TBCE lawsuit, they would prohibit them from practicing it.  This is not new, it has been in evidence since the turn of the LAST century.

In the next installment we'll look at some of the evidence.

 
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Added: June 01, 2010. 10:57 AM CDT
Why anti Chiropractic?

One word MONEY!!!!!
There is no other reason
Anonymous
 
 
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