Chiropractic Styles and Other Techniques
When we think of chiropractors, we tend to think of the profession as a whole, without always realizing that there are some differences between styles of chiropractic treatment. While some of those differences are small, others are quite large and affect how a chiropractor applies the theory and treatment.
Palmer/Straight Chiropractic
Straight chiropractic is the oldest form of the art, as originally developed by B.J. Palmer. Palmer believed that vertebral subluxation was the source of all illness and correcting them the key to overcome all ailments of the body. The underlying concept is that the body has a natural healing intelligence. Adjustments free affected nerves, allowing the intelligence of the body a clear pathway of communication. Given clear communication and the opportunity to do so, the body will heal itself. Straight chiropractors traditionally used only adjustments, with no added therapies and no nutritional supplements or medicinals used in treatment. These chiropractors tend to keep their practices quite apart from mainstream medical care.
Mixer Chiropractic
Mixer chiropractors "mix" chiropractic with other health care systems, including osteopathy, naturopathy and modern medicine. Mixers tend to believe that subluxation is only one of many causes of disease, and they employ a wide range of diagnostic and treatment modalities, including x-ray, electrotherapy, and techniques from physical therapy. They may also undertake additional training to add other forms of complementary and alternative medicine, such as acupuncture, to treatments. Mixer chiropractics are the largest group of chiropractors. These chiropractors are also more likely to interact with mainstream medicine, even working in integrated medicine clinics and hospitals.
Objective Straight Chiropractic
Objective straight chiropractors, which represent a minority of practitioners, are a fairly recent offshoot of Palmer/straight chiropractic. As some straight chiropractors adopted concepts such as diagnosis, objective straight chiropractors devoted themselves to one pure objective: the location and correction of vertebral subluxation. These chiropractors limit themselves entirely to issues of the spine, and practice chiropractic more as an art, and less a form of medicine.
Reform Chiropractic
Reform chiropractors are, for the most part, mixers who use adjustments to treat musculoskeletal disorders alone. They do not believe that chiropractic has an affect on internal organ illness or infectious disease, do not believe that subluxation is a cause of disease, and do not accept the idea of the body's healing intelligence. These are the most biomedical of all chiropractors, adopting modern mainstream medicinal theories of function, diagnosis and treatment of the skeleton. Reform chiropractors are a small, but growing minority in the profession.
Network Spinal Analysis
Network Spinal Analysis, also called network chiropractic, is a recent style of chiropractic performed without adjustments. Holding to the theory of subluxation and traditional chiropractic concepts of health and disease, chiropractors that use network spinal analysis (NSA) employ a diagnostic process similar to those from the straight styles. In treatment, however, NSA practitioners use gentle and precise touch to the spine, creating cues, or hints, to the body's innate healing intelligence.
Applied Kinesiology
Created in 1964 by George Goodheart, applied kinesiology (AK) is the practice of measuring muscle strength to diagnose internal illness. Popular, but highly controversial, a practitioner of applied kinesiology relies on correspondences between individual muscles and internal organs. By testing muscle strength, primarily through resistance tests, weaknesses are found and internal diagnoses made. The most controversial aspect of AK is nutrient testing, in which a patient is asked to hold, or is otherwise put in proximity of, a nutrient or drug, and muscles are tested for change in response to the substance. AK is practiced widely by healthcare professionals of all kinds.
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