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1       Alternative medical therapies, such as chiropractic, acupuncture, homeopathy, and herbal remedi
2                       Common topics included chiropractic, acupuncture, homeopathy, herbal therapies,
3 of the literature and a nine-member panel of chiropractic and medical specialists.
4 l/dietary supplements, acupuncture, massage, chiropractic, and homeopathy.
5 cal establishment has not yet fully accepted chiropractic as a mainstream form of care.
6            Much of the positive evolution of chiropractic can be ascribed to a quarter century-long r
7 neficiaries, 7104 (10.2%) received any PT or chiropractic care 3 months after a new CLBP episode.
8 s to investigate whether a single session of chiropractic care could increase strength in weak planta
9              Of the 1310 patients who sought chiropractic care for low back pain, 1088 (83%) had spin
10 ger term and potential functional effects of chiropractic care in stroke recovery.
11        Outcomes were assessed pre and post a chiropractic care intervention and a passive movement co
12                                Following the chiropractic care intervention there was a significant i
13                                    Of these, chiropractic care is one of the most common nontradition
14 , however, patients were more satisfied with chiropractic care than with care provided by primary car
15                               Median time to chiropractic care was longest for American Indian or Ala
16 ith comorbid CLBP and OUD, receipt of PT and chiropractic care was low overall and lower across most
17                                              Chiropractic care was the most used CIH therapy among no
18 43-0.67) persons had lower odds of receiving chiropractic care within 3 months of CLBP diagnosis comp
19      The main outcomes were receipt of PT or chiropractic care within 3 months of CLBP diagnosis.
20 rmacologic treatments (eg, physical therapy, chiropractic care), pharmacologic treatments (eg, opioid
21 ave been raised about the appropriate use of chiropractic care, but systematic data are lacking.
22 of nonpharmacologic treatments (acupuncture, chiropractic care, massage therapy, occupational therapy
23           Any use of VA-covered acupuncture, chiropractic care, massage therapy, yoga, or meditation/
24 ic White veterans and far less likely to use chiropractic care, while those of Hispanic or other race
25 surance about the appropriate application of chiropractic care.
26  increase the number of persons referred for chiropractic care.
27 ic stroke patients after a single session of chiropractic care.
28  veterans to use yoga and more likely to use chiropractic care.
29 erapies, including physical therapy (PT) and chiropractic care.
30 Of these, 68 (74%) had documented medical or chiropractic evaluation of scoliosis.
31 rview, we briefly examine the development of chiropractic from humble and contentious beginnings to i
32 er adjustment for base-line differences, the chiropractic group had less severe symptoms than the boo
33 for the physical-therapy group, $429 for the chiropractic group, and $153 for the booklet group.
34 differences between the physical-therapy and chiropractic groups and no significant differences among
35 f all the so-called alternative professions, chiropractic has made the largest inroads into private a
36                                              Chiropractic has taken on many of the attributes of an e
37                                              Chiropractic is a large and well-established health care
38 ctive to men (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.1-3.5); and chiropractic is an effective treatment for breast cancer
39                 The public increasingly uses chiropractic largely for spinal pain syndromes and appea
40 g and Allied Health Literature, the Index to Chiropractic Literature, the Cochrane Central Register o
41     The next decade should determine whether chiropractic maintains the trappings of an alternative h
42                                              Chiropractic management appears to be as cost-effective
43  the McKenzie method of physical therapy and chiropractic manipulation had similar effects and costs,
44                          Physical therapy or chiropractic manipulation was provided for one month (th
45  to the McKenzie method of physical therapy, chiropractic manipulation, or a minimal intervention (pr
46                                A majority of chiropractic manipulations are performed for inappropria
47 ts not undergoing surgery, physical therapy, chiropractic manipulative therapy, or epidural steroid i
48 , physical therapy, physiotherapy, yoga, and chiropractic may become the first line of treatment opti
49                      Retrospective review of chiropractic office records against preset criteria for
50 nese Medicine (TCM ), Ayurveda, naturopathy, chiropractic, osteopathy, massage, yoga, relaxation ther
51                               A total of 648 chiropractic patients completed online questionnaires in
52  different biopsychosocial factors influence chiropractic patients' pain-related outcomes and vice-ve
53 ury-long research effort focused on the core chiropractic procedure of spinal manipulation.
54 , but recent expansion in federal support of chiropractic research bodes well for further scientific
55  used treatments were massage therapy (57%), chiropractic services (20.7%), and nonprescribed alterna
56 s for 12 complementary medical services (eg, chiropractic services and herbal remedies).
57                            The proportion of chiropractic spinal manipulation judged to be congruent
58 The number of inappropriate decisions to use chiropractic spinal manipulation should be decreased.
59                                              Chiropractic theory is still controversial, but recent e
60 es (physician visits, emergency room visits, chiropractic visits, physical therapist visits, and nigh