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Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
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Article Touts Increased
Demand for Chiropractic and Alternative Services
In the July 14, 2002 issue of the Boston Globe appeared
an article with the headline, "Demand for Alternative
Medicine Rises - Acupuncturists and Chiropractors
Increasingly Sought." The article defines all forms of
healthcare that are not medical as "Alternative
Medicine". Most chiropractors object to the usage of
this term since chiropractic care is clearly not
medicine. Chiropractic stands as a separate and distinct
form of health care.
Despite this terminology issue, the Globe article cited
numbers from the National Institutes of Health that
calculate that all of "alternative" health care
represents a $21 billion-a-year industry. This number
should be kept in context. According to figures released
in a report on February 7, 2001, the US Census Bureau
showed that US health care industry revenues hit $1.01
trillion in 1999. The article also states that surveys
show about one-third of Americans visit one of these
"alternative" practitioners at least once a year, and
that this percentage will increase.
In an attempt to have the medical profession better
understand chiropractic and other forms of health care
classified as alternative, Tufts University received a
five-year, $1.5 million grant last August from the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) for finding ways to
include alternative medicine as part of the required
medical school curriculum. Dr. Mary Lee, dean of
educational affairs at Tufts' School of Medicine stated,
"The NIH is interested, and so are we, in training
traditional doctors to understand complementary
medicine."
To meet the increased demand the article cited
statistics and projections that showed the current and
future numbers of doctors of chiropractic. According to
the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, (BLS) in the year
2000, there were an estimated 49,949 chiropractors. The
BLS projects that by 2010 that number will grow to
61,654 chiropractors, representing a 23 percent
increase. "Since the average growth rate for all
occupations over a 10-year period is 15 percent, those
figures are significant," said BLS economist Alan Lacey.
This projected growth represents the ever-increasing
desire on the part of the public to continue to embrace
chiropractic care. |
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