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Studies on Chiropractic
Government Recommendation for Management Protocols
In today’s evidence-based health care environment, governments are engaged
in developing scientific protocols for the management of various health
care conditions. Interventions provided by health care professionals are
now being scrutinized and examined as never before, to ensure that effective,
efficacious and safe health care interventions are available and given
priority in the public’s best interest. The chiropractic profession encourages
guideline development based on scientific research.
Recent government guidelines continue to support the previous studies
on the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and safety of chiropractic spinal
manipulation recommending chiropractic management for acute low back pain.
Rosen, M. et al. (1994) Back Pain. Report of a CSAG Committee on Back
Pain, HMSO, London, England.
In 1994. A British Clinical Standard Advisory Group was asked by the
United Kingdom Health Ministers to develop guidelines for patients with
back pain. The group found that there is considerable evidence that manipulation
can provide short-term symptomatic benefit in some patients with acute
back pain and recommended that manipulation should be available as a therapeutic
option for the treatment of National Health Service (NHS) patients with
back pain, and should be carried out by appropriately trained therapists
or practitioners.
Bigos, S., Bowyer, O., Braen, G., et al. (1994) Acute Low Back Problems
in Adults. Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. AHCPR Publication No. 95-0642.
Rockville, MD; Agency for Health Care Policy and Research Public Health
Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
In December 1994, the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR,
a division of the US Department of Health and Human Services) released
a clinical practice guideline entitled Acute Low Back Problems in Adults.
The guideline was developed by a 23-member expert multidisciplinary panel,
using rigorous scientific methodology. The guideline concluded that relief
of discomfort of low back pain can be accomplished most safely by only
two methods: non-prescription medication and/or spinal manipulation. Most
other therapies currently in use for the treatment of low back pain were
found to be either ineffective or unsubstantiated by scientific research.
Side-effects associated with the use of medication were found to be greater
than those associated with manipulation, which were very limited.
Spitzer, W.O., et al. (1995) Whiplash-Associated Disorders (WAD): Redefining
Whiplash and its Management: Quebec Task Force on Whiplash-Associated
Disorders.
The Quebec Task force consisted of an 18-member expert multidisciplinary
panel whose mandate was to undertake a comprehensive review and study
of whiplash-associated disorders (WAD). One of the sections of the report
dealt with clinical guidelines for the diagnosis, treatment and prognosis
of WAD. It was the Task Force consensus that the use of non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory agents and analgesics, short-term manipulation and mobilization
by trained persons and active exercises are useful in Grade II and III
WAD, and that manipulative treatments by trained persons for the relief
of pain and facilitating early mobility can be used in WAD.
Royal College of General Practitioners (1996) Clinical Guidelines for
the Management of Acute Low Back Pain, Great Britain.
The Royal College of General Practitioners, in consultation with the
Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, Osteopathic Association of Great Britain,
British Chiropractic Association and the National Back Pain Association
constructed clinical guidelines on low back pain management, based on
extensive international scientific evidence. One of the principal recommendations
of the guidelines is "to consider manipulative treatment within the
first 6 weeks for patients who need additional help with pain relief or
who are failing to return to normal activities" based on high level
evidence that within the first six weeks of onset of acute or recurrent
low back pain, manipulation provides better short-term improvement in
pain and activity levels and higher patient satisfaction than the treatments
to which it has been compared.
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