(Arlington, Va.) — According to long-awaited results from a congressionally
mandated pilot project testing the feasibility of expanding chiropractic
services in the Medicare program, patients have a high rate of satisfaction
with the care they receive from doctors of chiropractic.
When asked to rate their satisfaction on a 10-point scale, 87 percent of
patients in the study gave their doctor of chiropractic a level of 8 or
higher. What’s more, 56 percent of those patients rated their chiropractor
with a perfect 10.
Contributing to that satisfaction was the attention given to patients’ needs
and the accessibility of chiropractic care. Patients reported that doctors
of chiropractic listened to them carefully and spent sufficient time with
them. Some 95 percent said they had to wait no longer than one week for
appointments.
“Doctors of chiropractic everywhere should feel pride in these patient
satisfaction results and in being part of a profession that still sees the
great need for spending time with patients and truly listening to them,”
said Dr. Rick McMichael, president of the American Chiropractic Association
(ACA). “It’s clear that patients deeply value the time their chiropractic
providers spend with them and the expert care that DCs offer.”
The pilot, known as a “demonstration project” in Congress, was conducted
from April 2005 to March 2007 throughout the states of Maine and New Mexico,
and also in Scott County, Iowa, 26 counties comprising the Chicago
metropolitan area, and 17 counties in central Virginia.
Current chiropractic coverage under Medicare is limited to spinal
manipulation. Under the demonstration project, however, chiropractic care
was expanded to include diagnostic and other services, such as X-rays,
examinations, physical therapy and rehabilitation services.
The final report to Congress also includes information on the costs of
expanding chiropractic services in the demonstration sites. The report
indicates that in all but one of the demonstration sites, patients’ health
care costs were not significantly changed by expanding coverage of
chiropractic services. In contrast, a cost increase was found in the
Chicago metropolitan area. Further research into the reasons why the results
in Chicago differ from the rest of the demonstration project sites is needed
to better understand these findings.
“We already know that Medicare costs in general tend to be higher in Chicago
than other similar areas of the country. We must find the underlying cause
of the cost difference found in the chiropractic demonstration project and
determine whether it had anything at all to do with the expansion of
chiropractic services,” Dr. McMichael noted.
To further analyze the results of the demonstration project, ACA is creating
a taskforce of Medicare experts and researchers who will review the report
and develop a response for the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services.
To view the report online, visit www.acatoday.org/pdf/demo_report.pdf.
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