The Dude
Heisman Trophy Winner
--------------------308_Husker said:That is just completely false. Chiropractic has tons of scientific backing and it is exploding with research. Actually, in their scope of health care, they have about the most evidence supporting what they do and what ailments are best treated with chiropractic care (low back pain and cervicogenic headaches).But you'll always have to go back to the chiropractor because they don't actually treat anything either. That's the point.
Chiropractic has little to no scientific backing.
If you say that the chiropractors that claim they can cure cancer are quacks, then I would agree with you. However, in treating the musculoskeletal system, they are ranked as one of the best. If manipulating joints failed to work, then insurance companies and Obamacare wouldn't pay for it and physical therapy schools wouldn't be trying to teach it in their schools. Manipulation works and it works well when done correctly.
Chiropractic can feel good and has short term effects for back pain, but beyond that, it's complete bullsh#t."Furthermore, AM practitioners often do not care that their methods are irrational or unreasonable because they deceive themselves into thinking that what they are doing is justified because "it works," i.e., they have seen the results (confirmation bias) and they have a lot of satisfied customers (the pragmatic fallacy). A lot of medicine works because of the placebo effect, and a lot of science-based physicians are probably deceived by results just as AM folks are. These fundamental human tendencies to confirmation bias and self-deception are common in all human thinking but are guarded against by scientists by requiring specific logical and scientific tests of causal claims."
http://skepdic.com/faq.html#1
Like you said, there's a difference between treating symptoms and treating causes of problems. If it actually fixed the causes, people wouldn't have to keep going back. - So it's essentially a big fat ibuprofen.
And it's a horrible idea to take science cues from insurance companies and "Obamacare" . Insurance companies validate nothing in and of themselves.
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