There is a lack of data on chiropractic use, and the best of that data is a decade old.1 Now the American Journal of Public Health has published a paper authored predominantly by doctors of chiropractic, a first for that publication.
This paper presents "demographic and clinical characteristics" of chiropractic patients, documenting chiropractic visits in San Diego, CA; Portland, OR; Vancouver, WA; Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN; Miami, FL; and Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
The study presents these interesting particulars:
- Patients were primarily middle-aged (30-50) and married, with a "slight preponderance of women."
- About two-thirds of the patients had low-back pain; head/neck pain and extremity problems were the other predominant complaints.
- "More than 40% of the patients with low-back pain had acute (<3 weeks) episodes; about 20% and chronic (>6 months) episodes."
- "Patients with low-back pain had a mean of 14 visits (median=7) per episode of care, which lasted a mean of 60 days (median=29)."
- Visit rates among the U.S. sites "were not appreciably different form each other."
- "A small proportion of patients who are frequent or long-term users of chiropractic services cause the distributions of visits and episode length to be skewed to the right."
The American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) is published by the American Public Health Association, which has an aggregate membership of over 50,000 worldwide. The AJPH has a circulation of over 36,000. This is apparently only the third or fourth paper regarding chiropractic published in the AJPH's 88 year history.
References
- Shekelle PG, Brook RH. A community-based study of the use of chiropractic services. Am J Public Health. 1991;81:439-442.
- Hurwitz E, Coulter I, Adams A, Genovese B, Shekelle P. Use of chiropractic services from 1985 through 1991 in the United States and Canada. Am J Public Health. 1998;88(5);771-776. This paper was supported in part by grants from the Consortium for Chiropractic Research and the Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research.
Dynamic Chiropractic editorial staff members research, investigate and write articles for the publication on an ongoing basis. To contact the Editorial Department or submit an article of your own for consideration, email
.