Not
surprisingly, the article also presents an opinion from a medical doctor,
Dr. Robert Baratz, who said, "Show me a medical doctor who says,
`You're here for hypertension. Oh, why don't you bring your kids in,
too.'" In spite of these antiquated opinions, the Globe reported
that in 1998, children made 420,000 visits to Boston-area chiropractors.
This according to a study in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine. Local chiropractors say that figure has steadily grown since
that study..
The
article justifies the increased usage of chiropractic care by suggesting
there is an increased need. "To understand why, look no further
than Little Leaguers' mud-stained uniforms, laptops flipped open on the edge
of beds, and excessively heavy backpacks. Add in high-heel and platform
shoes worn by teenage girls, hours in front of Nintendo and, in some cases,
too much studying and not enough exercise, and you've got a lot of young,
aching backs." The Boston Globe also suggests, "The bigger
reason children are getting treatment, though, appears to be parental
experience. Some 27 million adults frequented chiropractors' offices in
2001, up from 22 million in 1996, according to the American Chiropractic
Association. As more adults find relief from their back pains through
chiropractic treatment, they're taking their kids in for checkups,
too".
Probably
the most telling part of the article were the patient comments. One
explains ''I started coming to the chiropractor because I had a lot of
tension in my back working in front of a computer all day,'' said Audet, of
Sharon. ''When I first saw kids here, I thought it was kind of weird. But
after my husband and I had been coming for four or five years, I thought,
`Why not have them try it?'"
The
chiropractors interviewed in the article explained that most younger
patients have no symptoms, but come in for wellness and preventative care.
They further explain that the children come in for correction of
subluxations to allow the body to function healthier.
Prescription
Drugs Kill More Floridians Than Illegal Drugs
For
the first time in history in the State of Florida, more people died from
overdoses of prescription drugs than from illegal drugs. This
statistic reported in the June 8, 2002 St. Petersburg Times came from
a report of the 24 medical examiners in Florida for the year 2001. The
article noted that there were
939 cases where lethal levels of prescription painkillers such as
OxyContin, methadone and Vicodin, or benzodiazepine drugs such as Xanax or
Valium were found. The 939 cases in 2001 more than tripled the 284 cases in
2000.
Jim
McDonough the Florida drug czar said the rise in prescription drug deaths
shows a need for better monitoring of prescription narcotics. However
this idea was rejected this year by the Florida Legislature.
McDonough, director of the governor's Office of Drug Control, said the abuse
of oxycodone, the main ingredient in OxyContin and numerous other
painkillers, continues to be worrisome. He commented, "It's a
drug abuse that came out of no place. There was an epidemic growth."
The
article reported that Florida deaths related to oxycodone and its chemical
cousin, hydrocodone, rose 45 percent in 2001 compared with 2000. They did
note that after doctors and the public became aware of the growing death
toll, those deaths dropped 14 percent during the last six months of 2001.
The total number of prescription related drug overdose deaths in Florida for
2001 was 939 compared to 714 deaths due to illegal drugs in the same time
frame.
Kids, Colic and
Chiropractic
From
the April 11, 2002 issues of CNN Interactive and Web MD comes a story about
children and colic. The story has an unusual slant in that there are
many medical opinions that admit that the medical approach is ineffective.
These same medical opinions also admit that the chiropractic approach did
help infants with colic. But the articles still fall short of
endorsing chiropractic care.
The
article quotes Dr. Maxine McMullen, a chiropractor in Davenport, Iowa, and
president of the International Chiropractic Association's Pediatric Council.
In it she states, "I've helped hundreds of babies with colic, every one
of them simply needed a spinal adjustment."
The
article does report on a study that appeared in the peer reviewed
journal, the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics. In the
study twenty-five randomly selected colicky infants received three to five
chiropractic adjustments over two weeks. By the end of that period, diaries
kept by parents showed that the babies shortened their daily crying episodes
by three hours. In contrast, the crying of 20 infants taking dimethicone
decreased by only one hour. In a previous study, published in the journal's
August 1989 issue, researchers tried the same technique on 316 colicky
babies and found that their crying soon diminished.
The
article seems almost begrudging in their reporting of the chiropractic
success with infants with colic. Several MDs still are skeptical of
children receiving chiropractic care. One section of the article tried to
explain the results by saying that infants with colic may well be really
suffering from back pain, and that the chiropractic care helps the infants
by helping the back pain. Most chiropractors reject this concept and
attribute the improvement to a removal of interference in the nervous system
known as subluxation.
Despite
the negative tone of the medical practitioners interviewed in the article,
none could dispute the fact that medical care was generally ineffective
while chiropractic helped the infants.
Painkillers
May Delay Bone Healing
From
the May 28, 2002 Associated Press comes a report of new research that
suggests some of the most widely used painkillers may delay healing of a
broken bone. According to the AP story, bone experts call the research
compelling enough that doctors should explain the risk before patients
choose a painkiller for a broken bone, spinal surgery or other bone injury.
The research shows that the biggest sellers, Vioxx and Celebrex are among
the worst drugs for preventing or slowing healing.
In
the study, researchers at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey gave 253 young rats with a splinted broken leg either Vioxx, Celebrex,
indomethacin or no drug. Indomethacin-treated rats took a week longer
to heal than untreated rats; the resulting bone was as strong. Even worse,
rats given Vioxx or Celebrex hadn't fully healed after two months, and what
new bone formed sometimes was only a weakened shell.
Researcher
O'Connor says "If it were my fracture, to me every day counts." In
response to this information, the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons
just alerted all its members to the study and the potential problem. Additionally,
the Arthritis Foundation's medical director has called for more research to
see if people really are at risk. In the meantime he says patients
should discuss with their doctors if they should temporarily quit any
anti-inflammatory painkiller until a broken bone heals.
Manual Therapy Works Best
for Neck Pain
The
above title comes from a May 6, 2002 Reuter's Health article reporting on a
study published in the May issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.
In this study Dr. Jan Lucas Hoving of Monash University in Victoria,
Australia reports that what they called "Manual Therapy" included
procedures performed by chiropractors. Other previous studies have
shown that over 90% of what most studies call "Manual Therapy" are
performed by doctors of chiropractic. 
In
this study, 183 patients with neck problems were given either "manual
therapy" (as the study calls it), exercise therapy or they were told to
continue routine care from their medical doctor, which included advice on
home exercises and prescriptions for pain medication for a 6 week period.
All patients were allowed to continue on any pain medication they had been
taking.
The
results showed that at the end of the study, about 68% of the
"manual-therapy" patients said they were "completely
recovered" or "much improved," according to the report.
This was vastly better when compared with 51% of those on exercise
therapy and 36% of patients who continued their medical care. The
conclusion from the researcher was obvious when they said, "Manual
therapy" seems to be a favorable treatment option for patients with
neck pain."
It
should be noted that the results obtained in this study would probably be
less than would be expected under chiropractic care. "Manual
Therapy" as delivered by untrained individuals can not be as precise or
specific as chiropractic adjustments delivered by trained practitioners who
perform adjustments on a daily basis.
Off-Label
Drug Prescriptions for Children Rampant
Two
separate articles from the June 1, 2002 issue of the British Medical Journal
deal with the subject of "Off-Label" drug prescriptions for
children. Off-Label means the usage of a drug for a purpose other than
that which it was approved and licensed for. Off-Labeling also applies
when drugs are used in a population that the drug was never tested on.
Such is the case in many drugs that were never tested on children but are
commonly prescribed for them.
One
of the two articles looks at a study in Germany and makes a chilling opening
statement. "Between 35% and 90% of the drugs prescribed to
hospitalized children are either not licensed for children's use or are
prescribed outside the terms of their product license (off label
prescribing). Subsequent adverse reactions are more likely than with
licensed products." Their comments were, "We found that
13.2% of prescriptions for a representative group of children in primary
care in Germany were off label." The article attributed 75% of
the off label usage to lack of information about the usage of the drugs.
The
second article dealt with the same problem in the United States. The
opening statement in that article included a comment about how a new drug
could come to the market in the US. "Until recently, the drug
need only to have been studied in the adult male population. Yet once a drug
is approved it may be prescribed by a physician for any population or
disease state desired." To attempt to change this situation a law
was passed, the FDA Modernization Act of 1997 (FDAMA), which
provided that manufacturers of drugs under patent could seek a
six month patent extension for performing studies leading to
labeling in children. This meant that if the drug companies performed
studies on children there could be six additional months of patent
protection worth millions or billions in revenue.
The
moral dilemma of such studies is that children are not of legal age to
volunteer themselves for such drug testing. In the past most studies
were performed on healthy male volunteers. Submitting healthy children
by their parents or guardians carries ethical questions not present in adult
volunteers. Unfortunately, as the article points out that some drug
companies wait until the patent is close to expiration before deciding on
whether or not to initiate studies on children. Often the decision is
based solely on the expected profit potential the drug may carry for the
extra six months of patent protection. This means that these drugs
were used on children for an extended period of time without any studies to
justify the usage.