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So how do we justify our approach as cost effective?
a drug may contain multiple ingredients and testing those ingredients in isolation may not give you many clues regarding the drug's effectiveness, moreover, if the drug has been designed specifically for that patient, it may not tell you how well that combination will work for another patient, in addition there is the placebo effect Is it time to recognise that the placebo as a reference against which to measure non-chemical interventions is nonsense? When we try and break down a complex and unique intervention into individual elements so that they can be tested against someone having ostensibly a similar experience minus that intervention that becomes so artificial it is pseudoscience and importantly disregards the nature of osteopathy. Osteopathy is not defined by 'cracking' joints or by craniosacral therapy or by any particular technique. It is not the same thing to everyone...which makes things very difficult...but it is not about the techniques used, at least not at a granular level. Without looking up the latest agreed definition (which probably comes from the US where they do both more..and less... as osteopaths than the UK tradition) I would say that at its heart osteopathy is about using non-pharmaceutical techniques to treat people with dysfunctions that are largely (but not exclusively) musculoskeletal. A T Still the originator of osteopathy created it in response to the deaths of three of his children from meninigitis and saw it as a full system of medicine in opposition to the brutal heroic medicine practiced at the time and believed that a body free of osteopathic lesions would be a body that could resist disease in all its forms. There are many possible applications for osteopathy and the boundaries of what it is appropriate to say we treat are contentious...so lets start with the basics...musculoskeletal issues. Whilst I said that osteopathy is not the sum of the techniques used I think it is useful to think about they might constitute:
I want to separate out pharmaceutical intervention. It doesn't form much of UK practice whereas it is almost ubiquitous in the US. It is not part of the uniqueness of osteopathy even if at some time it would be useful to understand how effective co-treatment could be. Cranial osteopaths and those who use lots of manipulations are almost mutually exclusive, both eyeing the other with a degree of suspicion and in the middle there are osteopaths who may use little or none of either and can sometimes be quite sniffy about both Where I am heading with this is that it would be useful to classify osteopaths into different cohorts, in order to assess their effectiveness for patients with particular and that perhaps the faultlines broadly fall into three categories
Then, part two, we need to work out what they are treating, and in this we should avoid over medicalisation. Luckily this is already happening. Diagaoses such as non-specific low back pain are more honest than trying to pin the cause on a particular structure or tissue, at least when there has been no trauma Thirdly there are different cohorts of patients, do we split them by age, lifestyle factors, health beliefs, chronicity, co-morbitities etc It's a pretty complicated matrix but in my opinion if we want to truly test how effective an osteopathic approach to treatment is then that is what we need to work towards , in the meantime my fear is that a less granular approach risks throwing the baby out with the bathwater and that would be a terrible shame...and not evidence based medicine
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February 2024
AuthorDamian is the principal osteopath at Vauxhall Village Osteopathy and Oval Osteopathy Categories
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