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The Medical Chiropractic Team

Medical and Chiropractic for Pain

Back pain is a common problem seen in daily practice, and a great deal has been written about it. Unfortunately, there is little consensus about  types of treatment are most effective.


A new study indicates that a multi-disciplinary approach— one that combines medical care, exercise, and chiropractic —may be the best way to reduce long-term disability in patients with low back pain.

Recent Research

This large study from the UK examined 1,334 patients with back pain who sought treatment at 181 general practices throughout the country. The patients were divided into randomized treatment  groups:


"Of six groups of participants, one received only best care in general practice. The other five received best care plus an intervention— exercise, manipulation in private or NHS premises, or manipulation in private or NHS premises followed by exercise."


The study participants were given a wide variety of surveys to complete, and they were retested three months after the beginning of treatment, and again at 12 months.

Study Findings

All of the patients improved from baseline. For instance, the Roland Disability score at the beginning of the study was 9 for all groups. The following graph  illustrates the gains experienced by all of the study subjects.


Pain levels in the "medical treatment plus manipulation" dropped from about 61 before treatment (on a scale of 0 to 100) to 41 after treatment—a significant  decrease.

working together

The Authors Conclude

"...Exercise improves back function by a small, but statistically significant, margin at three months; it also achieves sustained reductions in disability and  pain, and in adverse beliefs about back pain."


"Manipulation improves back function by a small to moderate margin at three months and a small but significant margin at 12 months; it also achieves sustained  improvements in disability and pain, adverse back beliefs, and general physical health."


"Combined treatment improves back function by a moderate margin at three months and a small but significant margin at 12 months; generally it achieves little  more than manipulation, except for much greater improvements in beliefs about back pain and fear avoidance."

The Team Approach

This study illustrates that the most effective treatment for back pain is one that involves medical and chiropractic professionals. When medical care is combined with an exercise program and spinal manipulation, the authors found a reduction in disability  and an improvement in general health that lasted at least 12 months after initial treatment.

Relevant Research

UK Beam Trial Team. United Kingdom back pain exercise and manipulation (UK BEAM) randomised trial: effectiveness of physical treatments for back pain in primary care.  BMJ 2004;329;1377. 


Goertz C, et al. Adding chiropractic manipulative therapy to standard medical care for patients with acute low back pain: Results from a pragmatic randomized comparative effectiveness study. Spine 2013; 38 (8): 627-634. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e31827733e7.

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