The inside story on how an 11-person group (with 6 D.C.s) is deciding the
future of chiropractic care inside the Veterans Administration
By Randy Southerland, Photos by Guy DAlema
Some day soon, more than 20 million veterans and their dependents will have
a new choice in health care. For the first time in history, doctors of chiropractic
will be a part of the mammoth Veterans Administration healthcare system, where
they will be checking for subluxations and providing care to former service
men and women on a par with medical doctors.
At least thats the idea behind legislation signed by President George
W. Bush last January calling on the VA to make chiropractic care available to
all vets. Before the first adjusting table is installed, however, a somewhat
reluctant bureaucracy must figure out what this upstart profession is all about
and how it can best be used in hospitals and outpatient clinics.
While the idea seems simple in theory, there are studies to be completed and
questions to be debated before chiropractors can be hired. When it comes to
introducing a new idea into the federal government, nothing is simple.
While the final say on details rests with the Secretary of Veterans Affairs,
Anthony Principi, much controversy has swirled around his appointment of a Chiropractic
Advisory Committee. The 11-member bodymade up of six chiropractors, two
MDs, a physical therapist, and a doctor of osteopathyis charged with issuing
recommendations. They must come to grips with sticky issues such as scope of
practice, whether chiropractors should be contracted or hired, and whether patients
have to get a medical doctors permission prior to seeing a D.C.
This is new territory for everyone involved, and the committee members are determined
to tread carefully.
We need to make sure we dont jump into this just to get chiropractics
foot in the door, says committee member Dr. Leona Fischer, an Elmhurst,
Ill., D.C. and Navy veteran who serves on the World Chiropractic Alliances
International Board of Governors. If its done in a haphazard manner
its not going to reflect positively on chiropractic. So the object of
the game is to make sure we have looked at whats going to work best to
get direct access and deliver quality care.
The committee came together for the first time in September and that meeting
was largely consumed with getting acquainted and housekeeping details,
says member Brian Murphy, a PT and clinical manager of rehabilitation at the
VAs Salt Lake City facility.
The real work will take place in the coming year as the committee members come
to grips with the details of the new program.
It is in those meetings that early congeniality is likely to be sorely tested.
The non-D.C.s on the committee frankly admit that their own knowledge of chiropractic
is limited.
Thats
a concern for me, because Im not sure how you can advise on something
that you have not experienced, observers Fischer.
To help remedy that problem, Committee Chairman Dr. Reed Phillips directed that
the first order of business at the December meeting be a mini-seminar on chiropractic.
Each D.C. is charged with delivering a presentation on the ins and outs of chiropractic
education, practice, and politics for the benefit of their non-D.C. colleagues..
In addition, the committee plans to visit a site where the Defense Department
is providing chiropractic services to military personnel.
Certainly to see how (chiropractic) has been implemented in the military
is one part of it, but also I understand we will be able to witness patients
being treated, says committee member Dr. Cynthia S. Vaughn, president
of the Texas Board of Chiropractic Examiners. Theyll be able to
see patients receiving treatments in the room.
The In-Fighting
The fact that chiropractic has gotten this far represents a considerable victory.
The VA Healthcare Systemdominated by medical doctorshas long resisted
any inclusion of chiropractic. Many within the medical community are continuing
to voice concern over the prospect of D.C.s acting as primary care providers.
The American Medical Associationpowered by a $7.3 million lobbying budgethas
fought to keep chiropractors from winning the right to be primary care physicians.
The chiropractors themselves must also come to grips with their own widely divergent
philosophies. The major associations held together a shaky alliance long enough
to shepherd the VA legislation through Congress. No sooner did it pass, however,
than the infighting that has long characterized the struggle between straights
and mixers flared up.
The ACA argued that members of the advisory committee that participated in the
Defense Departments chiropractic project should be reconstituted for service
on the veterans panel. When this proposal was rejected in Congress, each
organization submitted their own nominees.
Three members of the Defense committee were named to the new advisory body,
but there were also representatives from medicine, osteopathy and physical therapy.
To the horror of many D.C.s, even Dr. Charles DuVall, Jr. president of the National
Association for Chiropractic Medicine, and a longtime ally of anti-chiropractic
QuackWatch founder Dr. Stephen Barrett, was also given a seat.
Dr. Daryl Wills, ACA president, believes that it is very alarming to me
that the (VA) Secretary would also choose to include someone like Dr. DuVall
on the committee. He is a divisive force, and, in my judgment, does not want
the chiropractic profession to gain additional acceptance, nor does he wish
us to make progress in any way. I fear that his appointment is a warning sign
that the well-entrenched, anti-chiropractic bureaucracy at the DVA is alive
and well, and will be working hard to sabotage or severely limit the scope of
the new benefit.
The accusations werent directed just at the VA bureaucracy. The ACA was
also quick to blame the ICA and WCA for this turn of events.
Writing in Dynamic Chiropractic, Garrett Cuneo, ACA executive vice president,
charged, Once President Bush signed the legislation, the agreement was
broken by the ICA and the WCA. . . How much of this disunity encouraged the
VA to appoint a committee, which appears to have a majority bias against chiropractic,
is difficult to document.
Committee members are optimistic that the committee will be able to put aside
their differences and make the legislation work.
I know historically the ICA, ACA and WCA have all had contentious issues,
but this meeting was wonderful, contends Fischer. Everybody was
committed to working together for the greater good of chiropractic.
Overcoming Differences
Long-held divisions between the camps are obvious in the struggle over the VA
advisory committee.
The ACA wanted to ensure that chiropractors be able to act as primary care providers,
diagnosing illnesses and providing services beyond adjustments.
The more conservative groups such as ICA and WCA pushed for a more limited approach
that emphasized adjusting the spine and correcting subluxations.
While the results didnt seem to satisfy anyone, in the end it seems that
just about every viewpoint is represented.
If we are indeed going to work in a multi-disciplinary facility, I think
it probably is wise for us to have input on how our role will be structured
by other professions who will be impacted by this, says committee member
Dr. Michael McLean, a Virginia Beach, Va., chiropractor.
McLean believes that differences between chiropractic and the medical approach
can be addressed and worked out before the program is launched.
Just how much consensus the committee can reach remains to be seen, but observers
say total agreement isnt necessary or even desirable.
Federal advisory committees are not required to come to consensus,
says Sara McVicker, the VA official who serves as manager for the committee.
Its nice if they do, but on the other hand, if you can get all these
people with all these views in one room and they all agree, why do you need
an advisory committee?
She predicts that over the next two years, before it expires in 2004, the committee
is likely to issue a series of recommendationssome of which may be unanimous,
while others come in the form of majority and minority reports championing different
points of view.
A Chiropractic First
While the VA is not the first government agency to include chiropracticD.C.s
are already working under contract at various defense department locationsthe
sheer size and reach of its health care facilities offers tremendous opportunities
for exposure. Presently, VA patients have to get a referral from their MD or
other provider to see an outside chiropractor under the agencys fee
basis system.
If VA doesnt provide a service, we send the vet out to someone who
is a private providerin this case a provider of the patients choice,
says McVicker.
During fiscal year 2001, just 945 patients received chiropractic care during
a total of 10,938 visits.
That really didnt surprise me much given the age of our patient
population, explains Murphy. In my medical center (Salt Lake City)
the average age of our patients is 73. Half of the people we treat are over
65.
Murphylike many in the medical communitybelieve patients suffering
from osteoarthritis and other musculo-skeletal problems common to the elderly
are not good candidates for chiropractic care.
Effect
on the Profession
While the details of chiropractic care remain cloudy, one thing that is clear
is that a growing number of D.C.s will soon be working in the VA system side-by-side
with other health professionals. For many of them it will be a new experience
that may very well require the development of new skills.
Some observers predict that the long-term effect on the profession could be
profound, as chiropractic becomes more closely integrated with the Allied Health
Professions.
Its important to realize that virtually all of the work that will
be done in the VA facilities will be done in a hospital context, says
McLean.
He believes this experience will have a profound effect on the profession. D.C.s
will need to become much more familiar with not only the methods practiced by
medical doctors and hospital staffs, but with the nature of patient illness
as well.
There are definitely protocols if youre working in a multi-disciplinary
setting, he explains. Many of the patients will have a variety of
problems and may be under a variety of different care providers while theyre
in the hospital, and we will be one of those. We will have responsibility for
receiving referrals, but if a person should have some life-threatening condition,
certainly we will have responsibility for making referrals.
It will present a very different environment for most chiropractors, who are
more familiar with a solo office practice. This change is also likely to force
chiropractic colleges to begin training students in the skills needed to function
within a hospital setting.
Im certain it will make a big change in the preparation of chiropractors,
he predicts. Im not saying it will change our scope, but we have
to be more aware of what other practitioners do, and we have to be more open
for professional interaction.
That professional interaction may also change the way the medical community
views chiropractic as well. With more than half of all medical physicians receiving
their training in VA hospitals, D.C.s have an unprecedented opportunity to build
relationships that can be carried outside the VA.
For these providers to receive training in a facility where there are
chiropractors working will literally change their view of the chiropractic profession,
says McLean.
Clearly, the opportunities for chiropractic are great, and perhaps that explains
the passion that surrounds the push to inclusion in the VA. Much still remains
in doubt, but to a greater extent then ever before, the profession has been
extended the promise of greater acceptance. What D.C.s are able to do with that
promise is now up to them.
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