Research is key to progress
by
Robert Blanks, PhD
While many may argue
details, most health professionals agree that the current public health
crisis stems from at least four converging themes:
1. Americans have adopted
a life of poor health behaviors regarding food choices, exercise and
stressful lifestyles. We also live in an increasingly polluted environment
that assaults health at many levels. These factors conspire to compromise
primarily the person's immune, endocrine and nervous system functions ‑‑ and
thus his or her overall health.
2. The nation has
overwhelmingly allocated health resources towards disease care rather than
prevention or wellness perspectives. With this strategy, we must wait until
disease develops to intervene. This is in contrast to the alternative
strategy of preventative and wellness care, where patients are encouraged to
maintain a healthy lifestyle, avoid risks and be proactive about their
health.
3. Medical infrastructure
(federal/state agencies, third‑party insurers and many corporations)
reinforce the disease care cycle by reimbursing only "medically necessary
(disease) care," and supporting sick leave policy rather than prevention and
wellness strategies (e.g., on‑site company fitness facilities, vacation,
etc.).
4. Acute biomedical care
in the US is the best in the World. But, it is massively expensive, not
designed nor intended for long term use, and all but fails if the underlying
factors of health, lifestyle, environmental pollution, immune compromise and
affordability are not addressed.
For more than a century,
the chiropractic profession has pursued a health doctrine of vitalism (the
body as a largely self‑correcting energetic system) and holism (care for the
person vs. symptom relief) and is generally recognized as a stand‑alone
health delivery system.
Practitioners following
these original tenets diagnose and correct a condition called vertebral
subluxation that can impact many aspects of health. They also advise their
clients on healthy food choices, exercise and other health‑promoting
strategies.
Several large
epidemiologic studies demonstrate the cost‑effectiveness of chiropractic
care, but major advancement in the field has been hampered by poor
organization and lack of research infrastructure. Research in chiropractic
is grossly under‑funded with regard to other health professions ‑‑ for
example, medicine and dentistry ‑‑ and the focus of major funding in the
field has been largely medical endpoints (e.g., musculoskeletal disorders,
headaches, etc.) and not the spectrum of positive health outcomes
experienced by the practitioners in their offices every day.
Until this information is
brought together, the true health and wellness benefits of chiropractic and
the ability to solve the major health problems facing America cannot be
adequately addressed.
There have been
significant attempts to bring forth and document the breadth of chiropractic
outcomes, but these grassroots efforts have been stalled from lack of
funding and organizational issues. Unfortunately, the evidence‑based
documentation supporting chiropractic must be brought forth across multiple
fronts, in carefully designed studies, and the results published in quality
peer‑reviewed journals in order to advance the science of chiropractic.
Moreover, it is
imperative to make these new research advancements available to the public,
other health professions, and to legislators in order to promote practice
building and to systematically advance the field through the initiation of
favorable public health policy.
(Dr. Blanks is
Professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at Florida Atlantic
University and a past Professor of Anatomy and Neurobiology at the
University of California, Irvine. Prior to this he spent two years at the
Max Planck Institute for Brain Research in Frankfurt, Germany and two years
in the Department of Anatomy at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Blanks is on the
Advisory Board of the International Spinal Health Institute, is a Board
Member of the Council on Chiropractic Practice and is actively involved in
chiropractic research.)