The Philosophy of Chiropractic
Before there was a chiropractic profession, there was
a question in the mind of the founder of chiropractic, Daniel David
Palmer. "I desired to know," Palmer would say, "why one
person was ailing and his associate, eating at the same table, working
in the same shop, at the same bench, was not."
Palmer concluded that people get sick when something
interferes with their nervous system, primarily when this interference
occurs where their spinal nerves exit their vertebrae (through an area
called the intervertebral foramen, a tunnel formed between two
vertebrae). Palmer called this interference a subluxation, and, as the
history of chiropractic now shows, the term stuck.
Chiropractic is deeply rooted in this philosophy, as
well as that of Palmer's son Bartlett Joshua Palmer. This outlook is
based on the premise that healthy people have healthy spines and nervous
systems. Extrapolating from this, chiropractors believe that
subluxations are linked to a weakened nervous system, which can lead to
a weakened immune system and can prevent the body from functioning
properly and staving off illness. For that reason, many chiropractors
believe that subluxations are involved in conditions such as low back
pain and possibly even illnesses like colic and asthma.
According to the chiropractic philosophy, there are
five components to a subluxation: a spinal component, a nervous
component, a muscular component, a soft-tissue component and a disease
component. Chiropractors focus on detecting these and removing
subluxations, freeing up the body's natural healing ability, improving
function and relieving pain.
Because of this belief in the body's healing
potential, chiropractors have a holistic approach to health and
wellness. So, while the philosophy keeps the profession distinct,
practitioners often work in multidisciplinary settings, joining medical
doctors, massage therapists, nutritionists, reflexologists, naturopaths,
acupuncturists and other complementary health-care providers to meet the
goal of improving people's health.