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by Xurinos 5491 days ago
I would like to know the real answer on this, too. I have read from people who claim to have been on the industry's inside (went to school for it, etc). The claim is that there are a bunch of logical steps based on false premises/beliefs and that some of the work results in mid- to long-term damage to the body in exchange for short-term relief.

Edit: http://www.chirobase.org/05RB/CPSQ/02.html -- More information that looks like something I have read.

Edit2: http://www.chirobase.org/01General/controversy.html -- "NACM members publicly renounce the subluxation theory and other forms of chiropractic pseudomedicine." Interesting stuff. What I read: There is a portion of "chiropractic medicine" that is snake oil; how do I identify what is real? Are NACM members better informed?