Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
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Friday, May 3, 2024
Index to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic LiteratureIndex to Chiropractic Literature
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ID 23032
  Title Forgotten Perameters of General Practice: The Chiropractic Obstetrician
URL http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=11611208
Journal Chiropr Hist. 1982 ;2(1):26-33
Author(s)
Subject(s)
Peer Review Yes
Publication Type Article
Abstract/Notes

While there is a contemporary debate within chiropractic today which questions alleged intrusions into medical practice, there is ample historical data to substantiate early general practice by chiropractors in the field of obstetrics. The first "chiropractic accoucher" may in fact have been D.D. Palmer himself, who is known to have signed birth as well as death certificates in late 19th Century Davenport, and who accepted pregnancy as a biological process, and not disease in his 1910 work. The first competing school to Palmer in 1905 established a chair in obstetrics and the first recorded license to practice that year (in Illinois) was for "chiropractic and midwifery". The early announcements of the Palmer School declared that its instruction in obstetrics was "sufficient to qualify the student to pass any of the state boards examinations in midwifery." Medicine's assault on what one journal termed "the meddlesome midwife" was equaled only by the fury with which it sought to dispatch chiropractic from the therapeutic arena. Chiropractors who practiced OB became particular objects for harrassment, yet surprisingly it existed, if not flourished in several states through half of this century and still exists in Oregon.

This abstract is reproduced with the permission of the publisher. Full text is available by subscription.


 

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