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| [January 30, 2013] |
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Chiropractic Patients Less Likely to Undergo Lumbar Surgery
ARLINGTON, Va. --(Business Wire)--
A recent study
in the medical journal Spine found a strong association between
chiropractic care and the avoidance of lumbar spine surgery. The
American Chiropractic Association is encouraged by this and other recent
research supporting chiropractic's conservative, less costly approach to
low-back pain.
Key findings of the Spine study show that:
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Patients under age 35, women, Hispanics and patients whose first
provider was a chiropractic physician had reduced odds of lumbar spine
surgery
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Approximately 43 percent of patients who saw a surgeon first had
surgery
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Only 1.5 percent of those who saw a chiropractor first ended up having
surgery
Two additional studies reinforce ACA's longstanding position that health
care providers should start with conservative approaches to treatment,
such as the services provided by doctors of chiropractic, before guiding
their patients to less conservative alternatives. Such an approach
benefits patients and cuts health care spending-especially for a
condition as common as low-back pain.
A recent study
in Medical Care found that adjusted annual medical costs among
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) users was $424 lower for
spine-related costs, and $796 lower for total health care cost than
among non-CAM users. Furthermore, CAM treatments were cost neutral to
health care systems, meaning that CAM users did not add to the overall
medical spending in a nationally representative sample of patients with
neck and back problems.
Published in The Lancet, "The
Global Burden of Disease 2010," authored by an international group
of experts assessing the world's biggest health challenges, underscores
the need for better solutions to back pain and other musculoskeletal
conditions. The massive survey indicates that while people may be living
longer they are doing so more frequently with disability. The study
identifies musculoskeletal conditions as the second leading cause of
disability, and cites low-back pain as one of the major contributors to
disability worldwide. GBD authors noted that creating effective and
affordable strategies to deal with the rising burden of non-fatal health
outcomes should be an urgent priority for health care providers around
the world.
"As governments and health systems around the globe search for answers
to complicated health challenges such as rising numbers of chronically
ill and disabled patients and runaway costs, research is finally
demonstrating what the chiropractic profession has promoted for years:
that caring for patients with conservative treatments first, before
moving on to less conservative options or unnecessary drugs and surgery,
is a sensible and cost-effective strategy," said ACA President Keith
Overland, DC.
The American Chiropractic Association (ACA), based in Arlington, Va.,
is the largest professional association in the United States
representing doctors of chiropractic. ACA promotes the highest standards
of patient care and ethics, and supports research that contributes to
the health and well-being of millions of chiropractic patients. Visit www.acatoday.org.

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