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Geriatric Guidelines Include Chiropractic, Sort ofBy Editorial Staff In March of 1998, the board of directors of the American Geriatric Society approved clinical practice guidelines for chronic pain in older persons.1 And while these guidelines tend to be focused on pain management from a medical/pharmacological approach, they make specific references to chiropractic and other forms of alternative care as important components in pain treatment:"Pharmacologic therapy is most effective when combined with nonpharmacologic strategies to optimize pain management."2,3 The guidelines contain a section on the "nonpharmacologic strategies for pain management in older persons."
Specific recommendations for the nonpharmacological approach include: I. "All patients with diminished quality of life as a result of chronic pain are candidates for nonpharmacologic pain management strategies." III. "Nonpharmacologic interventions can be used alone or in combination with pharmacologic strategies for chronic pain management." VIII. "Other nonpharmacologic therapies may be helpful for some patients with chronic pain. Chiropractic, acupuncture, or transcutaneous nerve stimulation may be helpful for some patients, but they are expensive and have not been shown to have greater benefit than placebo controls in the management of chronic pain. These interventions should be provided only by professionals." Chiropractors will vigorously take exception to the contention that chiropractic is more expensive and of no greater benefit than placebo. Clearly, the board of directors of the American Geriatric Society haven't been reading the cost-effectiveness studies comparing chiropractic and medical care for back pain! And the placebo comments will have chiropractors pulling out their collective hair. Even though the focus of American Geriatric Society is still on medicating patients, the guidelines do put the geriatric medical physicians on notice that chiropractic and other forms of alternative care "should be an integral part of care plans for most chronic pain patients." Perhaps the American Geriatric Society is catching on that patients are seeking out alternative practitioners over primary physicians by a nearly 2-1 margin.5 But questions remain: How do you combine chiropractic (the nondrug-oriented care) with drug therapy for older patients with chronic pain? How should the chiropractic profession integrate into geriatric care to serve this ever-growing segment of our population? References
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