Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Do Chiropractors Function As Complete As My Household MD?

By Randy Goodson

What do they do?

Most medical doctors treat the majority of your ailments by either surgery, poisoning the illness or burning it with chemicals or heat. Instead of invasive surgery, risky chemical treatments or injection of toxins that are deadly, chiropractors use a different way to help your body heal itself. This is why there is some suspicion in the public mind about them. Chiropractors endeavor to treat illness and disease in the body, especially pain, through non-invasive, non-chemical avenues before resorting to the more drastic and dramatic forms of treatment.

With the numbers of healed and satisfied chiropractic clients growing every day, the overall medical establishment has granted it more and more credibility with each passing year.

The satisfaction of being treated by a form of medicine that doesn't involve injuring you in some way is enormous, so much so that many people don't even mind that they don't know exactly how it works. With the 3rd highest number of practitioners on the continent, it is obviously a profession in high demand. Add that it is the most used drug free form of medical treatment available and you can see why it is growing so much.

What exactly defines Chiropractic?

The easiest way to explain what the practice is, is to look at its definition which is comprised of Greek words that translate into "practice of the hands". Just picturing the use of hands in a medical practice will give you a good idea of what chiropractic treatment does and how it does it.

Sometimes joints will become rigid and lose range of motion, so a chiropractor will forcefully move the joint in order to align it appropriately to free up nerve signals from the spine. These movements are referred to as "manipulation" and can properly align your spine and other joints so that you will eventually experience reduced or eliminated pain.

Can They Be Compared To A General Practitioner?

In undergraduate studies, a chiropractor takes the same medical or pre-medicine classes and credits as any other medical doctor. The number of laboratory, clinical and classroom hours for each chiropractor is 4200 hours. Upon completed the rigorous undergraduate study, every chiropractors moves on to complete their doctorate degree, which involves learning the same difficult and complex knowledge that any other medical professional is required to know.

I guess the biggest difference would be the application of the material learned. Most doctors are trained in pharmacology and the chiropractors are trained in spine health.

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