Ah, the dangers of post editing! Here's another interesting Britism: "bollocks" is as you say, but if something is described as being "the dog's bollocks" that's roughly the equivalent of "the bee's knees" - i.e. the bomb. Go figure...He said bollocks. Common term used by Brits to infer the word we yanks call bullsht
Ah, the dangers of post editing! Here's another interesting Britism: "bollocks" is as you say, but if something is described as being "the dog's bollocks" that's roughly the equivalent of "the bee's knees" - i.e. the bomb. Go figure...
What I'm interested in is pain relief. I could go to my GP and get a script for oxycodone or I could go to a pain management clinic and get a rhizotomy. But I don't like sound of either one of those.
Apparently we are under educated and must immediately resume having pain because relief did not happen for a scientifically legitimate reason.I've been to several chiros never heard the word subluxation until here.
Apparently we are under educated and must immediately resume having pain because relief did not happen for a scientifically legitimate reason.
If having an open mind makes me excused from the big boy table I will happily take my female version of ballocks and my open mind to the big girl table.wally you are quite welcome to join me
![]()
Apparently we are under educated and must immediately resume having pain because relief did not happen for a scientifically legitimate reason.
If having an open mind makes me excused from the big boy table I will happily take my female version of ballocks and my open mind to the big girl table.wally you are quite welcome to join me
![]()
Apparently we are under educated and must immediately resume having pain because relief did not happen for a scientifically legitimate reason.
If having an open mind makes me excused from the big boy table I will happily take my female version of ballocks and my open mind to the big girl table.wally you are quite welcome to join me
![]()
Apparently we are under educated and must immediately resume having pain because relief did not happen for a scientifically legitimate reason.
If having an open mind makes me excused from the big boy table I will happily take my female version of ballocks and my open mind to the big girl table.wally you are quite welcome to join me
![]()
If the chiro I see is doing ART, which has nothing to do subluxations, why do I care about it? ART is a type of PT developed for overuse injuries. I'm not seeing a chiro to take a mole off my back by manipulating my spine into "proper alignment". For low back pain I'm seeing a chiro now who practices Cox technique. http://www.coxtechnic.com/about-us/flexion-distraction-relieves-spine-pain . He attempts to open up the passage around the nerves at L5S1 and L5L4. Its helped. He told me right from the get go, he can't cure me. I've been to an orthopedic surgeon, have had xrays and MRI. Spinal stenois, arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis. Again my options are painkillers, using radiowaves to kill nerves for temporary relief or non invasive measures such as the Cox technique, stretching and mild exercises. I do all 3 hoping to help with the pain and so I can continue to run my business.You're evidently wedded to your ignorance. Whether or not "Dr. Magic Fingers" provides you with relief is no excuse to bring up the subject of "never having heard of subluxations" then to dismiss doing the most rudimentary research. If you haven't heard of subluxations, it's fairly obvious by now you've got your fingers in your ears and are going "nah, nah, nah" at the top of your lungs.
My sarcasm meter was on high.You are fighting a strawman if you believe your relief is any less real because of lack of scientific evidence.
I feel your posts historically are quite thoughtful. I questioned arguing with you since I usually agree with you and find much of your opinions well reasoned and ethically accurate. However, I have found what you have said in this thread naive, despite well-intentioned, for reasons I have described above. I would be more than happy to elaborate on any of the evidence based issues we have disagreed upon. I have given you the opportunity to reply to my specific claims with evidence, which you have avoided. I believe I am the only person in this thread to have referenced a claim, more specifically, referenced a claim with a published paper. I think that is telling about the dedication I have to seeking truth about this issue.
I used the term "big boy table" as a well recognized term that painted a general picture instead of a way to be chauvinistic. It was a metaphor that had no sexist intent. I had hoped you would see through it based on my posting record, instead of a sexist ploy on my part.
You guys are always welcomed on my table. Old Pio, WWC, and the rest are not, they're probably wound too tight anyways with bad vibes, excessive body hair, gas, and a tenancy to run either hot or sweaty. If they don't wanna feel good for a while, more table time for those of you who do.
Just because one is a full fledged Doctor doesn't mean that they can not be a quack as well.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/10/01/death-doctor-who-profited-from-unnecessary-chemotherapy-for-fake-cancers-could-resume-practice-in-three-years/
Just goes to show you that you should always get a second opinion and be willing to always educate yourself about your own personal health.
My sarcasm meter was on high.
I find your assessment that I am niave interesting.
I have. I am also a student of the history of medicine and why we did things the way we did. When guidelines change, I (and most academic physicians I have worked with) do not just note the change but look to understand the reasoning behind the change. Same goes for differing guidelines from different institutions.It sounds more as if you maybe have not experienced the recommendations and research change as time goes on.
Things that were forcefully recommended or just as forcefully dismissed come full circle. I have been doing this long enough to have heard what was thought to be very good "research" tout and debunk all sorts of things only to see the same refuted.
I haven't responded to all of your posts re 'evidence' simply because human bodies are not machines. I understand that even the most evidence based studies are done with a set number of patients and most meta-analysis studies are retrospective. I can't tell you the number of times earlier in my career I told someone to do X because the recommendations based on research are X. I no longer word it that way. I now say currently it is recommended to do X. If/until the recommendations change then this is the plan.
I had posted a number of changed recommendations before. I would add antioxidants/vitamins of all sorts, the avoidance or addition of certain foods, the use of specific classes of medication for BP (they fight on this one all the time endo vs cards), cholesterol treatment with specific meds, treatment or not of homocysteine and crp levels, preventative medication for treatment of osteoporosis/or not, treatment of ASCUS on pap or not, screening tests (pretty much every one), vaccination schedules.... All of these have had 'research' based recommendations. Many of the recommendations are issued by national specialty organizations (who at times contradict each other) who have been absolute, quoting research.
Many of the disciplines discussed here rely on the evaluation of a whole body, not a specific condition. As there are no 2 humans who are exactly the same I conclude they would have an extremely hard time doing accurate research. It is not cookie cutter medicine and research needs a technique that is a cookie cutter approach. A homeopath might treat a particular sx with a different remedy dependent on all the other variables. Testing Pulsatilla on nasal congestion would not be accurate if it would not have been chosen for that person. I would say my opinion is not a full acceptance or a full rejection but ambivalence. There is currently no way to prove or disprove something so individualized.
In our community the super-specialists refer to both chiropractic and acupuncture therapy. There is no financial connection. Many of the patients find it helpful. In the end, when you are caring for a patient, the thing that gives them relief is important.
interesting thread.
personally I would never let a chiropractor "crack" my spine or whatever it is they do. it sounds dangerous and I think I've read of patients being severely injured by this. or maybe it was one of those 60 minutes type specials that exposed the whole thing as quackery. then again I'm a layperson.
perhaps Chinese, Indian (how about those doshas?) and other alternative medicines have something to offer. other than placebo. but ***? why aren't we testing this stuff in trials, like we do for new drugs?? a new drug spends years coming to market, yet you can wander into a 'natural' store and buy all kinds of crap (literally) that could be harmful.
another one I would be interested in opinions on is homeopathic remedies. it sounds nonsensical. then again, does it work like vaccines? ideas?
You guys are always welcomed on my table. Old Pio, WWC, and the rest are not, they're probably wound too tight anyways with bad vibes, excessive body hair, gas, and a tenancy to run either hot or sweaty. If they don't wanna feel good for a while, more table time for those of you who do.
Just because one is a full fledged Doctor doesn't mean that they can not be a quack as well.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/10/01/death-doctor-who-profited-from-unnecessary-chemotherapy-for-fake-cancers-could-resume-practice-in-three-years/
Just goes to show you that you should always get a second opinion and be willing to always educate yourself about your own personal health.
...Usually I am fairly articulate and understandable. I appear not to be so today. I will try again. in less conceptual/more concrete terms. Short, sweet and to the point-Unlike many of my word choices, I used that word specifically. I think the mentality of "If it makes you feel better it works" is naive, but well-intentioned. It does not take into account the many other variables that are crucial to this discussion including regression to the mean, the hawthorne effect, placebo and nocebo effects, resource allocation, NNT, NNH, etc.
I have. I am also a student of the history of medicine and why we did things the way we did. When guidelines change, I (and most academic physicians I have worked with) do not just note the change but look to understand the reasoning behind the change. Same goes for differing guidelines from different institutions.
You say that like it is a bad thing. Guidelines change with new research, as they should. The old research that was "very good" is still very good, it may just be expanded upon. I feel you are misrepresenting much of the changes as full 180s. Guideline revision is largely based on changing target populations for treatments and threshold for treatment. NNT (Numbers needed to treat), specificity, sensitivity are relatively fluid values and we need to adapt as new information can better guide our treatments.
It is important to note that guidelines are just that. Guidelines. They are not laws. It still comes down to the individual physician and the individual patient. You have to take into account the patients goals and wishes. A good example is that of PSA (prostate testing). Most guidelines now recommend against routine screening. However, based on patient wishes and informed consent, a physician can freely screen if he deems it necessary.
I think there is a strawman in there. National specialty organizations quote research but do not state it in a "absolute" way. Again, you seem to be saying things in a negative light that I think are positives. I want medicine to work with the best current knowledge. I also would like them to adapt to new changes in research. I acknowledge much of the treatments we currently do will change in scope of practice. Great. Find something better, show me it is better and I will use it.
I would also use this as a spot to highlight how alternative medicine can tend to work. They (and this is a broad brush, sorry) will continue to use a treatment even after it has been shown to not be effective. Naturopaths are still using coffee enemas to treat pancreatic cancer even after the horrible failure of a large trial to deem its efficacy in pancreatic cancer. Physicians do not change their practice as well and I criticize them all the same.
Any physician should be evaluating the whole body as well, especially as a PCP. If not, find a new physician. It is true that acute care can trump a whole evaluation but an incomplete review of systems allows one to miss important findings.
There are millions of hours put in by some of the best and brightest around the world each year to advance medical knowledge. To say that we cannot do accurate research is a vast simplification and discounts the tremendous advances we have made in the last century using the scientific method.
I am choosing to not touch homeopathy with a 10 foot pole here because I cannot seem to articulate something without sounding extremely condescending (not that it has stopped me in the past)
True, some may refer there. I think the more important question is if they think it works. I worked with a physician who performs acupuncture. He was happy to do it to anyone who wanted it, and offered it to those who did not have adequate pain control. However, when we were talking academically in private, he would freely admit it does not work. He justified it by doing a service for those who want it. I find that way of thinking a bit ethically dubious.
And this-I believe in evidence based medicine.
leswp1 said:It is because I have seen the evolution that I withhold passing judgment on things I do not think are fully understood.
I was stating my belief there is no way to control for all the variables taken into consideration when Integrative medicine choses a treatment
-...therefore I believe it makes it difficult to conduct research on the method accurately. Unless you are working with clones finding a control group that matches all of the variables would be exceedingly difficult.
-I believe in evidence based medicine.
Personally I don't care if something is placebo or has a bunch of studies supporting it. If it works then it is good.
I used homeopathic stuff to start my labor. The midwife said nothing was happening when I was checked. I took something and was in labor with in the hour. Was it placebo? don't know and don't care. It worked and I wasn't induced. Had back pain so severe I couldn't breathe without my knees buckling. Saw the chiropractor and had significant relief immediately. Again- I don't care if it was placebo.
More convincing to me was giving my 9 month old a homeopathic remedy and seeing him respond with drastic change in sx. Placebo by proxy? Have seen a c5-6 quadriplegic get acupuncture and function at c7-8 level within days. No one on the medical team had an explanation as there was no other intervention happening and the injury/level was well documented. Placebo or not I am pretty sure that guy was happy with the result.
Main point- if it works and does no harm- good.
All knowledge is provisional. Nothing is fully understood. Everything is subject to revision. Given the time, I could tell you exactly what would be needed to change my mind about every single thing I believe in.-It is because I have seen the evolution that I withhold passing judgment on things I do not think are fully understood.
Not sure what "Standard medicine" is. It is either supported by evidence or it is not (there is room for discussion, and shades of grey). Why not state it like that? Why make arbitrary divisions like this?-Integrative medicine considers those variables differently when choosing the components of a treatment. Some of these variables Standard medicine does not take into account.
Why can we study certain things that are nuanced but not others? This is where the power of a study is important. See women's health study.-I was stating my belief there is no way to control for all the variables taken into consideration when Integrative medicine choses a treatment
-...therefore I believe it makes it difficult to conduct research on the method accurately. Unless you are working with clones finding a control group that matches all of the variables would be exceedingly difficult.
Every mystery ever solved throughout history has turned out to be not magic.-There are many things that humans did not conceive of in the past and have figured out.
We never will. All scientific knowledge, by design, is provisional.-I will continue to withhold judgment rather than dismiss or actively embrace most of the things offered because I do not think we completely understand the human body.
I live in a world of grey and love it.-Grey is a very hard color to tolerate but I do not think anything to do with a human body is black and white, completely understandable or predictable.
This
And this
Cannot be reconciled
This statement is in direct opposition to this.
Hey, that's what I said.![]()