When sports chiropractors first appeared at the Olympic Games in the 1980s, it was alongside individual athletes who had experienced the benefits of chiropractic care in their training and recovery processes at home. Fast forward to Paris 2024, where chiropractic care was available in the polyclinic for all athletes, and the attitude has now evolved to recognize that “every athlete deserves access to sports chiropractic."
Trending in Chronic Pain Management: Chiropractic
Chronic pain is a significant public-health issue – and it's only getting worse. Fortunately, more people are turning to conservative, nonpharmaceuctical care over opioids; with chiropractic one of the most frequently utilized nondrug choices.
"Trends in the Use of Opioids vs Nonpharmacologic Treatments in Adults With Pain, 2011-2019," published in JAMA Network Open, reveals all this and more.
Utilization: Nondrug Care Tops Opioid Use
"Exclusive opioid use for chronic pain significantly decreased from 2014 (14.43%; 95% CI, 12.95%-16.01%) to 2017 (10.57%; 95% CI, 9.56%-11.63%), while nonpharmacologic treatments significantly increased from 2014 (18.50%; 95% CI, 16.64%-20.47%) to 2017 (22.50%; 95% CI, 20.78%-24.29%). By 2019, any opioid use decreased to 15.52% (95% CI, 13.99%-17.14%), while any nonpharmacologic use increased to 43.84% (95% CI, 41.44%-46.27%)."
In fact, nonpharmacologic treatment surpassed opioid treatment among adults with chronic, nonsurgical pain.
People Increasingly Turn to Chiropractic
"The most prevalent nonpharmacologic clinicians were chiropractors and physical therapists. [Per previous research,] chiropractic care increased from 6.9% in 1990 to 8.4% in 2012. Our study shows that use of chiropractic care continued increasing through 2019 (chronic pain, 25.6%; surgical pain, 8.9%)."
Chiropractic and physical therapy use for chronic pain surpassed overall opioid use during the study period.
Important Policy Takeaways for Health Care and Insurance
"Our study holds broad clinical and policy relevance, including expanding the reimbursement for nonpharmacologic health care professionals and equalizing direct access – without a physician referral – [our emphasis] between these professionals in some circumstances. Administrators and health care professionals may benefit from education on the effective non-pharmacologic treatments and which licensed professionals can be consulted to deliver such treatments."