• @voluble@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    21 year ago

    Sure, I get that. I hear a story occasionally where, I don’t know, someone’s ankle is fucked up or something, and they went to a chiropractor, and it got better. Would it have gotten better if that person took no action at all? Maybe, I think probably. I don’t really contemplate chiropractics more than that.

    There’s a deeper story here about the availability of healthcare that’s way more concerning to my mind. In any city in this country, you can probably find and walk into a chiropractor office this afternoon and be seen immediately (maybe I’m wrong?). While the waitlists for specialist medical doctors are absolutely insane, and bordering on immoral that people are forced to wait for months or years in pain.

    • @Jason2357@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      11 year ago

      I can walk into a fortune teller’s office and be seen immediately. Skilled medical professionals are both in high demand, and limited supply. It’s a problem, but we don’t learn anything by comparing them to people who don’t have those constraints. I do agree with you that there will one day be a reckoning that putting people on long wait lists without fixing the problems for decades amounted to something immoral.

      • @voluble@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        21 year ago

        For sure, & I didn’t intend to appear as though I was equivocating real medical specialists with chiropractors. Just observing that their popularity might be less about a population filled with woo ideas, and more about a deficit of real doctors & a bogged down & underfunded healthcare system. I agree, those chickens will come home to roost.