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The vast majority of chiropractors utilize public health concepts every day as an integral part of patient care. For instance, chiropractors give advice on risk factors that should be avoided and protective factors to be added by their patients to enhance healing and prevent illness.
This text fills the need for a public health textbook specifically designed for the chiropractor. This book will not only be of interest to chiropractic students, but also practicing chiropractors because it will provide information they can utilize to provide better care by positively intervening with their patients and their communities regarding public health matters.
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As a scientist who is fortunate to speak to audiences around the world, I field questions from clinicians about a wide range of topics including chiropractic, science and research. While the questions may be about the experiments I conduct or how their results relate to practice, there is always one question that I am asked without fail. In fact, it is the same question Dr. Brad Lohrenz asks in his recent commentary in Canadian Chiropractor (“The tail wagging the dog,” October, 2019. Page 20). To paraphrase, “why don’t you researchers investigate the amazing things I see in my practice, with ‘real’ chiropractic?”
The question is an excellent one and reflects an issue that touches all health professions – the lack of sufficient scientists, time and funds to investigate everything of interest and do so with the required quality. As such, health professions must make difficult decisions about how to prioritize chronically inadequate research resources. Chiropractic is no different.
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