By Daniel DeNoon
WebMD Medical News
Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
on Tuesday, October 12, 2004
Oct. 12, 2004 -- Chiropractic care cuts health care costs,
a new study shows.
The study comes from American Specialty Health Plans Inc. of San
Diego. The company provides employers with health insurance coverage
for complementary medicine, including chiropractic care and acupuncture.
The company compared four years of back pain claims from two groups:
700,000 health plan members with chiropractic care coverage and
1 million members with the same health plan without chiropractic
care coverage. It's the largest study yet of how chiropractic care
affects the cost of health care, notes study co-leader Douglas Metz,
DC, chief health services officer at American Specialty Health.
"No matter how we perform the analysis -- whether we look at
total costs to the health plan, at lower back pain care, at musculoskeletal
care -- in each data set, the population covered for chiropractic
had a lower overall cost to the health plan than the population
without access to chiropractic benefits," Metz tells WebMD.
"We believe this study is the first to show that chiropractic
[care] can be a cost-effective treatment option for back pain."
Costs Down, Patient Satisfaction Up
With Chiropractic Care
Compared with doctor-only health plans, the study found that:
Chiropractic care cut the cost of treating back pain by 28%.
Chiropractic care reduced hospitalizations among back pain patients
by 41%.
Chiropractic care reduced back surgeries by 32%.
Chiropractic care reduced the cost of medical imaging, such as X-rays
or MRIs, by 37%.
The report appears in the Oct. 11 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine.
Although the researchers did not look at patient satisfaction in
this study, Metz says company studies show that 95% of chiropractic
care patients are satisfied with the care they receive. Patients
often say they are satisfied with the chiropractic care they receive,
says Scott Boden, MD, director of the Emory Orthopaedic and Spine
Center in Atlanta.
"Chiropractic patients tend to be satisfied because of the
hands-on attention they get," Boden tells WebMD. "But
there are different schools of chiropractic and different kinds
of chiropractors. There are some that make accurate medial diagnoses
and give appropriate treatments, and there are those that treat
less well-documented disorders with treatments that may not be of
acceptable quality. There is a wide range of variation."
Doctors, too, vary in the quality of care they offer back pain patients,
Boden says. Patients without chiropractic care coverage may first
see general practitioners who may run up health care costs by prematurely
sending patients off to get expensive tests and treatments.
"A disease like back pain can have a lot of variability in
the ways medical professionals approach patient care," Boden
says. "The best thing is to have an organized, integrated approach
that uses state-of-the-art and cost-effective care. Many -- if not
most -- primary care providers have little training in how to manage
musculoskeletal disorders. That leads to some of the costs. If you
were to match a chiropractic network against trained physicians
instead of general medical practitioners, you might get different
results."
Chiropractic Care Entering Mainstream
This may be the first study to offer concrete evidence that chiropractic
care saves money. But businesses already are getting the message,
says George DeVries, president and CEO of American Specialty Health.
"Since 1987, we have thousands if not tens of thousands of
employer groups that offer chiropractic coverage as a supplemental
insurance rider," DeVries tells WebMD. "These range from
mom-and-pop groceries to top-10 businesses. The reason they continue
to offer these plans is patient satisfaction and low cost."
Boden says his institution is opening a new facility that will offer
patients integrated medical care that will include chiropractic
care.
"We have everything under one roof. The finishing piece is
going to be a complementary medicine center that will include chiropractic,
massage, acupuncture, and probably nutrition," he says.
Even so, it would be a leap of faith to say that doctors and chiropractors
always agree on the best way to treat back pain.
"We screened 50% of the chiropractors in the Atlanta area before
we found two who were medically appropriate and similar in approach
to how we deal with spine problems," Boden says.
But Metz maintains that chiropractic care offers quality treatment
of back pain.
"The bottom line is that conservative management of back care
is effectively performed by doctors of chiropractic," he says.
"In cases where medical intervention is needed, chiropractors
are schooled to make the appropriate referrals. It is a cost-effective
option for back pain."
SOURCES: Legorreta, A.P. Archives of Internal Medicine , Oct. 11,
2004; vol 164: pp 1985-1992. Douglas Metz, DC, chief health services
officer, American Specialty Health Plans, San Diego. George DeVries,
president and CEO, American Specialty Health Plans, San Diego. Scott
Boden, MD, professor of orthopaedics, Emory University School of
Medicine; director, Emory Orthopaedic and Spine Center, Atlanta.
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