Kosloff TM, Elton D, Tao J, Bannister WM. Chiropractic care
and the risk of vertebrobasilar stroke: results of a case–control study in U.S.
commercial and Medicare Advantage populations. Chiropr Man Ther 2015,23:19 doi:10.1186/s12998-015-0063-x
ABSTRACT
Background: There is controversy surrounding the risk of
manipulation, which is often used by chiropractors, with respect to its
association with vertebrobasilar artery system (VBA) stroke. The objective of
this study was to compare the associations between chiropractic care and VBA
stroke with recent primary care physician (PCP) care and VBA stroke.
Methods: The study design was a case–control study of
commercially insured and Medicare Advantage (MA) health plan members in the
U.S. population between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2013. Administrative
data were used to identify exposures to chiropractic and PCP care. Separate
analyses using conditional logistic regression were conducted for the
commercially insured and the MA populations. The analysis of the commercial
population was further stratified by age (<45 a="" analysis="" as="" associations="" calculated="" chiropractic="" conducted="" descriptive="" determine="" different="" exposure="" for="" hazard="" manipulative="" measure="" o:p="" odds="" of="" periods.="" proxy="" ratios="" relevance="" secondary="" the="" to="" treatment.="" using="" visits="" was="" were="" years="">45>
Results: There were a total of 1,829 VBA stroke cases (1,159
– commercial; 670 – MA). The findings showed no significant association between
chiropractic visits and VBA stroke for either population or for samples
stratified by age. In both commercial and MA populations, there was a
significant association between PCP visits and VBA stroke incidence regardless
of length of hazard period. The results were similar for age-stratified
samples. The findings of the secondary analysis showed that chiropractic visits
did not report the inclusion of manipulation in almost one third of stroke
cases in the commercial population and in only 1 of 2 cases of the MA cohort.
Conclusions: We found no significant association between
exposure to chiropractic care and the risk of VBA stroke. We conclude that
manipulation is an unlikely cause of VBA stroke. The positive association
between PCP visits and VBA stroke is most likely due to patient decisions to
seek care for the symptoms (headache and neck pain) of arterial dissection. We
further conclude that using chiropractic visits as a measure of exposure to
manipulation may result in unreliable estimates of the strength of association
with the occurrence of VBA stroke.
Muramoto M, Matthews E, Ritenbaugh C, Nichter MA. Intervention
development for integration of conventional tobacco cessation interventions
into routine CAM practice. BMC Compl Altern Med 2015,15:96 doi:10.1186/s12906-015-0604-9
ABSTRACT
Background: Practitioners of complementary and alternative
medicine (CAM) therapies are an important and growing presence in health care
systems worldwide. A central question is whether evidence-based behavior change
interventions routinely employed in conventional health care could also be
integrated into CAM practice to address public health priorities. Essential for
successful integration are intervention approaches deemed acceptable and
consistent with practice patterns and treatment approaches of different types of
CAM practitioners – that is, they have context validity. Intervention
development to ensure context validity was integral to Project CAM Reach
(CAMR), a project examining the public health potential of tobacco cessation
training for chiropractors, acupuncturists and massage therapists (CAM
practitioners). This paper describes formative research conducted to achieve
this goal.
Methods: Intervention development, undertaken in three CAM
disciplines (chiropractic, acupuncture, massage therapy), consisted of six
iterative steps: 1) exploratory key informant interviews; 2) local CAM
practitioner community survey; 3) existing tobacco cessation curriculum
demonstration with CAM practitioners; 4) adapting/tailoring of existing
curriculum; 5) external review of adaptations; 6) delivery of tailored
curriculum to CAM practitioners with follow-up curriculum evaluation.
Results: CAM practitioners identified barriers and
facilitators to addressing tobacco use with patients/clients and saw the
relevance and acceptability of the intervention content. The intervention
development process was attentive to their real world intervention concerns.
Extensive intervention tailoring to the context of each CAM discipline was
found unnecessary. Participants and advisors from all CAM disciplines embraced
training content, deeming it to have broad relevance and application across the
three CAM disciplines. All findings informed the final intervention.
Conclusions: The participatory and iterative formative
research process yielded an intervention with context validity in real-world
CAM practices as it: 1) is patient/client-centered, emphasizing the
practitioner’s role in a healing relationship; 2) is responsive to the
different contexts of CAM practitioners’ work and patient/client relationships;
3) integrates relevant best practices from US Public Health Service Clinical
Practice Guidelines on treating tobacco dependence; and 4) is suited to the
range of healing philosophies, scopes of practice and practice patterns found
in participating CAM practitioners. The full CAMR study to evaluate the impact
of the CAMR intervention on CAM practitioners’ clinical behavior is underway.
1 comment:
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