Some may call us here at Idaho Chiropractic Group "late bloomers" and we'll take it! I say better late than never. So here we are the little fish in the BIG pond. Being this is our very first blog I struggle with what topic to start with. So I suppose I'll start with something about Chiropractic care.

Chiropractic began in 1895 when its founder, Daniel David Palmer, claimed the cause of any and all disease could be removed by--and needing nothing more than--his hands. The name given to this new profession became its identity. As stated earlier, chiropractic means "done by hand" and throughout its evolution the profession has struggled with justifying any departures from this fundamental principle of delivering care.

Spinal manipulation was not an unknown treatment in 1895, and Palmer never claimed to be the first to use manipulation for the cure of disease. He did claim, however, to be the first to use specific contacts as short-leverage points for making more specific spinal "adjustments." Harvey Lillard was the name of D.D. Palmer's first patient, and an adjustment reportedly curing Lillard's deafness is regarded as the seminal moment for the new profession.

D.D. Palmer established his science, art, and philosophy of chiropractic and started a school called the Palmer School of Chiropractic in 1905. Many of his first students were medical doctors exploring this new profession. This early period in the history of chiropractic was a time when many new methods of healing were being explored.

What were the issues between chiropractors and physicians?

mtch0021.jpgChiropractic's earliest years witnessed a great deal of tension between conventional allopathic medicine and this new chiropractic approach. Between 1873 and 1899, each state established statutes to practice medicine. But there were as yet no statutes to practice chiropractic. This put chiropractors at risk of arrest for practicing medicine without a license.

But despite opposition from allopathic medicine, states also began enacting chiropractic licensure statutes in 1905, largely due to the demands for care made by chiropractic patients.

This process of chiropractic licensure in all states was finally completed in 1974. But all the while, licensed or not, chiropractors continued to work as the public demanded. Many chiropractors practicing in states where chiropractic licensure laws were yet to be enacted defiantly opposed the medical statutes they regarded as an infringement of their rights and obligations to serve their patients. Until the 1950s and 1960s, it was not uncommon for chiropractors to be jailed and fined.

What is the situation today?

mtch0008.jpgThe more recent professional cooperation and mutual appreciation between chiropractic and conventional medicine lie in stark contrast to many years of discord. Cooperation and the collaborative care of patients are now quite common.

Interdisciplinary practices are now becoming more common in a variety of settings, with chiropractors, medical doctors, physical therapists and others working as partners in occupational health, sports medicine teams, and rehabilitation centers.

References

Chiropractic history. (1981). The archives and journal of the Association for the History of Chiropractic. Baltimore, MD: The Association for the History of Chiropractic.

Moore, J. S. (1993). Chiropractic in America: The history of a medical alternative. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Wardwell, W. I. (1992). Chiropractic: History and evolution of a new profession. St. Louis, MO: Mosby-Year Book.

Expert Contributor: 

Larry Kuusisto, PhD, DC

 Idaho Chiropractic Group:  Dr. Corey Matthews and Dr. Timothy Klena

403 S. 11th # 110 Boise, Idaho 83702  208-343-6900


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Monday
9:00 am - 5:30 pm
Tuesday
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Wednesday
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Thursday
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