Are Chiropractors Real Doctors?
Posted on 2010-07-22 11:34:21
A
chiropractic college grants a D.C. or Doctorate of Chiropractic degree.
Chiropractors are licensed as health care providers in every U.S. state
and dozens of countries around the world. While the competition for
acceptance in chiropractic school is not as fierce as medical school,
the chiropractic and medical school curricula are extremely rigorous and
virtually identical. In fact, chiropractors have more hours of
classroom education than their medical counterparts. As part of their
education, chiropractic students also complete a residency working with
real patients in a clinical setting, supervised by licensed doctors of
chiropractic. Once chiropractic students graduate, they have to pass
four sets of national board exams as well as state board exams in the
states where they want to practice.
Just like medical doctors,
chiropractors are professionals that are subject to the same type of
testing procedures, licensing and monitoring by state and national
peer-reviewed boards. Federal and state programs, such as Medicare,
Medicaid, and Workers' Compensations programs cover chiropractic care,
and all federal agencies accept sick-leave certificates signed by
doctors of chiropractic. Chiropractors are also commissioned as officers
in the military.
The biggest difference between chiropractors
and medical doctors lies not in their level of education, but in their
preferred method of caring for people. Medical doctors are trained in
the use of medicines (chemicals that affect your internal biochemistry)
and surgery. Consequently, if you have a chemical problem, such as
diabetes, hypothyroidism, or an infection, medical doctors can be very
helpful. However, if your problem is that your spine is mis-aligned or
you have soft tissue damage causing pain, there is no chemical in
existence that can fix it. You need a physical solution to correct a
physical problem. That is where chiropractic really shines.
Chiropractors provide physical solutions -- adjustments, exercises,
stretches, muscle therapy -- to help the body heal from conditions that
are physical in origin, such as back pain, muscle spasms, headaches, and
poor posture. Another distinction is the fact that it is completely
appropriate to receive chiropractic care even if you do not have
symptoms. Unlike standard medical doctors, whom you visit when you have a
symptom to be treated, chiropractors offer adjustments to improve
spinal alignment and overall well-being before symptoms develop.
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