Sherman to hold research symposium
Sherman College of
Straight Chiropractic will host the International Research and Philosophy
Symposium (IRAPS): A Conference on Vertebral Subluxation on October 9‑10.
The keynote speaker is Christopher Kent, DC, president of the Council on
Chiropractic Practice and Vice President of the World Chiropractic Alliance.
According to the
college, the conference will address the extent to which patient outcomes
support or challenge a cyclic relationship with the philosophical tenets
underlying vertebral subluxation correction.
"Since the inception
of chiropractic, its practice has been strongly reliant upon a predictive
philosophy," college literature explained. "As well, chiropractic research
has continued to demonstrate a variety of patient outcomes associated with
vertebral subluxation correction care. However, the link between what
chiropractic philosophy predicts and what scientific research has reported
has not been widely explored."
This theme is based
on an investigation of the relationship between philosophy and science. As
these two concepts, in essence, are perceived as a continuum, the cycle of
inductive and deductive reasoning should allow philosophy to establish
hypotheses testable through science. The completion of the cycle should
reflect the impact of science on the modification or retention of the
philosophy it has explored.
There will be three
categories of relevant presentations:
** Philosophical
papers that discuss the general nature and validity of philosophy and
science, including papers that evaluate philosophy and science in regard to
the practice of vertebral subluxation correction.
** Papers reporting
patient outcomes. Outcomes include a broad range of significant changes
including, but not limited to, physical and physiological status, and
overall health and quality of life parameters associated with subluxation
correction care. Submissions may range from case reports, case studies,
pilot studies, observational studies, controlled clinical trials as well as
descriptive papers and structured interviews or subjective studies.
** Presentations
that discuss patient outcomes in regard to supporting or challenging the
tenets of the philosophy underpinning vertebral subluxation correction. This
category allows for an evaluation of the level of responsiveness between
philosophy and science within the practice of vertebral subluxation
correction.
A $500 award will be
given to the most informative presentation.
For further
information, visit
the Conference website.