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dysphemistic treadmill's avatar

Why is this an argument for osteopathic medicine, rather than an argument that the MD pipeline, cartelized by the AMA, should be expanded significantly?

I have nothing against DO’s, and I’d be happy to use one. But this article praises them primarily because they make up for the shortage of MDs, and because they’re roughly as effective as MDs. But the shortage of MDs is artificial, imposed by the cartel.

So, why not just expand the MD program so that the kids who currently get DOs get MDs instead? (MDs are also roughly as effective as MDs: this has been proven in extensive clinical trials). “We need more doctors, and DOs are more or less doctors,” is not a defense of osteopathy, just an indictment of the cartel.

A genuine defense of osteopathy on its own terms is a secondary theme in this article — maybe they do better with chronic pain and hypertension. But that defense is fairly weak: it’s not clear that the improvements are that large, that they are the result of anything distinctive about osteopathy, or that they cannot be swiftly imitated by the MD system.

So: hurray for more docs! Let’s train more docs! Let’s not worry too much about whether they are MDs or DOs!

All good points. But a reminder that the AMA intentionally produces fewer docs than our country needs.

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Nicholas Decker's avatar

You cite some evidence in favor of osteopathic medicine working. I have had the misfortune of reading them. I will be very blunt.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6134408/ — “simulated rct” on observational data. So an after the fact fishing expedition, with no attempt whatsoever for sorting on perceived severity. Junk, toss it.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24481801/

Another observational study. Don’t let doctors do statistics! They’re so bad at it! Junk, toss it.

https://dacemirror.sci-hub.ru/journal-article/e956b3f56e92cb0c2a48ba030511a3cc/cerritelli2015.pdf?download=true

I would bet you, at even odds, that this paper is fraudulent. Look at figure 2, page 7 — what is the theory here for why it should have a preposterously large effect on migraines? Does it not boggle imagination? You have found, not treatment but a panacea. So no, it’s probably horseshit.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2848182/

They find no difference between dummy light touch treatment, and OMT as well. First decent set of methods so far.

Chiropractic medicine does not hold up — why does this?

You need to be more skeptical of the academic literature. It is filled with liars and fools — especially in medicine. If it’s not an RCT, it’s probably junk, and even if it is. You need to be more aware of sorting by unobservables. This article is far too credulous, and does not bring credit to the byline.

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