140(p83) has noted:
[T]he chiropractor provides the patient with a structured, supportive
environment and theoretical explanations designed to take the mystery out
of process and problems. In essence, the chiropractor first manipulates a
patient's belief structure before manipulating his or her physical structure.
Chiropractic is in no sense passive; it is, from the start, engaged.
Except when contraindicated (as in patients with neoplastic disease and those
with extreme osteoporosis), some form of therapy is almost always indicated.
For most symptoms, there is a suitable manipulation or a designated mode of
redress.
Chiropractic adjustment evokes an experience of change so palpable that
the patient can often hear it in the characteristic "pop" or "crack," indicating
that normal range of motion has been exceeded and a state of greater mobility
and ease, however temporary, has been achieved. A perception of transformation
has been audibly triggered. The chiropractic approach to healing relies on
the opposite of double-blindedness; it enlists the full participation and
awareness of both parties.
From the first encounter on, chiropractors generate different expectations
from conventional physicians. Because conventional practitioners assume that
back pain, in the absence of systemic signs, is likely to be self-limited,
it is not unusual for a patient to wait weeks for an appointment with a specialist
or for a radiographic diagnostic assessment. Because a chiropractor believes
that back pain is both explicable and amenable to treatment, a patient can
usually obtain an appointment within 24 hours of a telephone call. The message
of empathy, urgency, comprehension, and support conveyed by such a rapid response
is reassuring and provides a heightened sense of care and compassion.
CONCLUSIONS
Chiropractic has endured, grown, and thrived in the United States, despite
internal contentiousness and external opposition. Its persistence suggests
it will continue to endure as an important component of health care in the
United States. In response to the countless requests for the treatment of
pain, chiropractors have consistently offered the promise, assurance, and
perception of relief. Chiropractic's ultimate lesson may be to reinforce the
principle that the patient-physician relationship is fundamentally about words
and deeds of connection and compassion. Chiropractic has managed to embody
this message in the gift of the hands.
Author/Article Information

From the Center for Alternative Medicine Research, Department of Medicine,
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Reprints: Ted J. Kaptchuk, OMD, Center for Alternative Medicine Research,
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline
Ave, Boston, MA 02215.
Accepted for publication August 6, 1998.
This study was supported in part by grant U24 AR43441 from the National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md; the John E. Fetzer Institute, Kalamazoo,
Mich; the Waletzky Charitable Trust, Washington, DC; the Friends of the Beth
Israel Hospital, Boston, Mass; the J. E. and Z. B. Butler Foundation, New
York, NY; and the Kenneth J. Germeshausen Foundation, Boston, Mass.
We thank Harvey Blume, Janet Walzer, MEd, Debora Lane, and Marcia Rich
for editorial assistance and Robb Scholten, Linda Barnes, PhD, Maria Van Rompay,
and Anthony Rosner, PhD, for research assistance.
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