When news of the new VA Committee was released last month, most D.C.s
reacted with mixed emotions. On the one hand, the panel had
representatives from across the professional spectrum and it was
refreshing to see new names on the list, people who would bring creative
ideas and renewed energy to the proceedings.
On the other, however, the presence of so many non-chiropractic names
(and one blatantly anti-chiropractic person) was at the very least
disappointing.
After all, since it was designated a chiropractic advisory
committee, everyone would have preferred an all-chiropractic panel. When
was the last time a D.C. was appointed to a medical advisory
committee?
Having Charles DuVall's name show up on the list enraged many of us.
What makes it all the more aggravating is that we all worked long and
hard to get this far, and the progress we've made getting chiropractic
into the Veterans Administration system is noteworthy and something we can
be proud of.
The ability of the major chiropractic organizations to work together on
this issue and end up with very positive legislation (despite encountering
some differences of opinion along the way) shows what we can accomplish
when we can get past the turf wars and posturing.
Since it's clear that a unified profession can accomplish a great deal
more than one that is constantly engaged in civil war, why is the ACA so
quick to want to stir up turmoil? Why is it trying to point the finger of
blame for the committee appointments?
Is the ACA really under the illusion that DuVall and the other
non-chiropractors were appointed because the WCA and ICA didn't march in
lock step with it when it came to submitting nominations for the
committee? Or, is the ACA just using this as an excuse to once more carp
and complain about other organizations and try to sow disharmony in the
profession?
After reading two articles published in DC, you really have to
wonder.
The article by Garrett Cuneo, ACA executive vice president was the most
insulting. He repeatedly refers to "fringe groups" and, although
he doesn't name names, ACA leaders have spat out that epithet before when
talking about the WCA. It's the same tactic the AMA used against
chiropractic. It's just as unethical, and proving to be even less
effective.
What Mr. Cuneo doesn't mention is that this particular fringe group has
had an enviable record of success.
If it weren't for the WCA, the VA bill itself might not have passed --
and definitely wouldn't have included reference to subluxation care.
One of our board members was the only D.C. appointed to the White House
Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Another served as
chair of the NGO Health Committee, and the WCA itself has been
recognized as an NGO associated with the Department of Public Information of the
United Nations.
We were the ones to spearhead the campaign for the ground-breaking
Concurrent Resolution 46 on chiropractic. We have strong allies in
Congress and our lobbyist is president of the American League of
Lobbyists. We're working with the World Health Organization to develop
global chiropractic standards. And we're doing all this and more on a
fraction of the budget used up each year by the ACA.
And they call us a fringe group?
The second article is unsigned but I'm assuming it was penned by D.C.
publisher Don Petersen.
Both articles refer to the so-called "agreement" between the
WCA, ICA, and ACA to support whoever the ACA wanted to nominate.
In reality, there was no such agreement and the ACA knows it.
The WCA and ICA simply -- and rightly -- refused to back the ACA plan
to nominate the same people who served on the Department of Defense
committee. That was a bad plan to begin with and every savvy political
expert said it was doomed to fail. But the ACA wouldn't budge.
They came in with their normal "my way or no way" attitude
and refused to even try to work with us to come up with a list of names we
could all agree upon and support.
In his article, Mr. Cuneo huffs, "This action by the ICA and the
WCA has left a bad taste in our mouths regarding future cooperation and
coalition building with them. In particular, it is impossible to work with
the current leadership of the ICA, which has shown its inability to follow
through on its commitment." Maybe that taste is merely one of sour
grapes.
They seem to be looking for an excuse not to have to deal in the open
with other organizations, or to admit they are not the sole arbiter of all
things chiropractic!
In a veiled reference to the Life University situation, Mr. Cuneo
notes, "Perhaps with what is occurring on the educational level,
changes will be made in the political organizations." It makes me
wonder if there might not be validity to the widely held theory that the
ACA engineered Life's accreditation problems to weaken the ICA.
The two articles didn't stop at merely repeating the same lie about the
"agreement."
Mr. Cuneo adds, "given its previous action, the VA saw this sign
of disunity as an opportunity to reverse what the Congress and the
president had done."
Mr. Petersen, predictably, echoes the ACA position. "Sadly, this
lack of unity created a golden opportunity for those overseeing the
administration of the chiropractic veterans' benefit to choose an advisory
committee that would be most detrimental to the chiropractic profession
and still appear representative."
How absurd! Are they really trying to convince doctors that DuVall was
appointed because the WCA and ICA refused to defer to the ACA about the
nominations? The fact is, there are many "DuValls" in this
world, and many in our profession. We have no idea how many of his
comrades in arms might have been appointed had the WCA, ICA and other
groups NOT put forth their own nominations for this important committee.
What if, as many political experts warned, the ACA's list of nominees
had been rejected (and, considering that they were Clinton appointees, the
chance of them being approved by the Bush administration was slim)?
DuVall's group, the National Association of Chiropractic Medicine, would
still have submitted its names -- and would have been the only
alternative!
Although I'm sure Mr. Cuneo and Mr. Petersen would have loved to have
the committee loaded with chiropractic physicians from the
ACA, we need doctors from all segments of our profession if we truly want
to represent the profession fairly. That's where our paths apparently
diverge. I think diversity is good for the profession and should be the
goal of all our efforts. Their statements make me wonder whether they
really want diversity -- or simply domination.
Yes, it's disheartening that the Department of Veterans Affairs chose
to select some of the people it did for the committee, and the WCA has
already lodged a protest. However, the ACA should stop trying to make
points by blaming the WCA and ICA.
If the ACA and D.C. continue to use every excuse to gripe and
whine about the actions of the WCA and ICA, they're going to waste a great
deal of time and energy. If you ask me -- or just about any chiropractor
-- those are two precious commodities best spent on more productive
pursuits.
Mr. Cuneo closes by saying, "We don't oppose the idea of
coalitions, but coalitions must be based on mutual respect and
trust." I hope he and the rest of the ACA remember that (particularly
the word mutual) the next time they call the WCA and ICA fringe
groups and try using us as scapegoats to mask their own legislative
failures.