Osteopathic Medicine (also known as osteopathy) is a system of medicine in the USA with a distinct worldview that applies osteopathic philosophy, principles, and treatment to standard medical care. Outside of the United States, "osteopathic medicine" is often used interchangably with "osteopathy".
With a strong emphasis on the inter-relationship of the body's nerves, muscles, bones, connective tissue and organ systems, Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine, or D.O.s, apply the philosophy of treating the whole person (holistic approach) to the prevention (medical), diagnosis and treatment of illness, disease and injury using conventional medical practice such as drugs and surgery, along with manual therapy (OMM).
Like Doctors of Medicine (M.D.s), Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.s) educated in the United States are fully licensed physicians and surgeons who practice the full scope of medicine. In most other parts of the world, D.O.s are not medically trained practitioners. Currently, there are 21 accredited D.O.-granting U.S. medical schools and 125 accredited M.D.-granting U.S. medical schools. Because of the abundance of M.D. schools, many people are more familiar with them; however, osteopathic medicine is growing at an unprecedented rate. Many new schools are planned to open in the coming years and existing schools have expanded enrollment to meet the increased demand for the physician workforce, particularly as baby boomers age. The majority of entering U.S. osteopathic medical students hold bachelor's degrees and some also hold master's degrees (M.S., M.A.) or other doctorate degrees (Ph.D., J.D.).
M.D. and D.O.-granting U.S. medical schools have similar curricula. Generally the first two years are classroom-based, with certain programs providing patient contact, while third and fourth years consist of rotations through the different major specialties of medicine. Upon graduation, M.D. and D.O. physicians pursue residency (medicine) training programs. Depending on state licensing laws, osteopathic physicians may also be required to complete a 1 year rotating internship. Osteopathic physicians also have the opportunity to pursue allopathic (M.D.) residency programs; however, the converse is not allowed. Within the U.S., osteopathic physicians practice in all medical specialties including, but not limited to, internal medicine, dermatology, surgery, radiology, etc. There is no distinction in pay between allopathic (M.D.) and osteopathic (D.O.) physicians; however, physician salaries differ noticeably among the various medical specialties.
Osteopaths educated in countries outside of the U.S. do not follow the same curriculum as U.S. trained D.O.s and are referred to as "non-physician osteopaths". Their scope of practice is limited mainly to musculoskeletal conditions and treatment of some other conditions using manual treatment (OMM), not unlike chiropractors in the USA.
Osteopathy was founded by Andrew Taylor Still, M.D., D.O., who was born in 1828 in Virginia, in reaction to what he perceived as inadequate medical treatment of his day. Specifically, he believed that other conventionally trained physicians over-prescribed to patients harsh and often toxic medications. He invented the name "osteopathy" by blending two Greek roots osteon- for bone and -pathos for suffering in order to communiciate his theory that disease and physiologic dysfunction were etiologically grounded in a disordered musculoskeletal system. Thus, by diagnosing and treating the musculoskeletal system, he believed that physicians could treat a variety of diseases and spare patients the negative side-effects of drugs. He intended his new system of medicine to be a reformation of the existing 19th century medical practices he knew and imagined that someday "rational medical therapy" would consist of manipulation of the musculoskeletal system, surgery, and very sparingly used drugs (e.g. antiseptics, ointments, or laxatives).
Osteopathic medical practice began approximately 120 years ago in the Midwest of the United States, just before chiropractic. From its very inception, early practitioners embraced the movement's philosophy and theories to varying degrees. Some held steadfastly to its core tenets while others were more apt to 'blend' features of osteopathy with other conventional or competing schools of medicine. Thus, early in the twentieth century, the American osteopathic profession adopted the use of medicine and surgery, whereas chiropractors continue to use strictly manipulative techniques. Outside of the USA, osteopaths tended to stay closer to their traditional approach. As biomedical science developed, osteopathy gradually incorporated all its proven theories and practices. Qualified DO's have been admitted to full active membership of the American Medical Association since 1969. Today, except for a stronger primary care emphasis in most osteopathic medical schools and additional education in musculoskeletal diagnosis and treatment, the training and scope of osteopathy in the United States is identical to that of allopathic or conventional biomedicine.
In the 1960s in California, the American Medical Association (AMA) spent nearly $8 million to end the practice of osteopathy in the state. After passing Proposition 22 which was backed by the AMA, D.O.s were granted the M.D. degree in exchange for paying $65 and attending a short seminar. The College of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons became the University of California, Irvine, College of Medicine. However, the decision proved quite controversial. In 1974, primarily due to the efforts of Viola M. Frymann, D.O., FAAO, the California Supreme Court ruled that licensing of D.O.s in that state must be resumed.
This decision by the California Medical Association in the 1960s to grant D.O. physicians an M.D. license was one of two turning points for D.O.s in their struggle for parity; the other being the U.S. Army's decision to allow D.O.s to enter the military as physicians. The California Medical Association may have been attempting to eliminate the osteopathic competition by converting thousands of their physicians to M.D.s. While most Californian D.O.s did take the opportunity to become M.D.s in order to improve their access to mixed-staff hospitals and enjoy wider professional recognition, in other parts of the country it provided the osteopathic community with the stamp of equivalency they desired. In 1974, the California Medical Association was challenged in the state supreme court and Proposition 22 was declared unconstitutional. The last state to grant D.O.s equal practice rights as a fully licensed physician was Mississippi, in 1973.
The scientific merit of manipulative medicine continues to be controversial. Within the osteopathic medical curriculum in the USA, manipulative treatment is taught as an adjunctive measure to other biomedical interventions for a number of disorders and diseases. The American Osteopathic Association has made an effort in recent years to both support and promote scientific inquiry into the effectiveness of osteopathic manipulation as well as encourage D.O.s to consistently offer manipulative treatments to their patients. However, the number of D.O.s who report consistently prescribing and performing manipulative treatment has been falling steadily. The reasons for this are poorly understood, but are believed to be related to changes in the general financing and delivery of health care, fewer D.O.s training in exclusively osteopathic post-graduate residency (medicine) training programs, and a lack of perceived relevance to a number of specialties and sub-specialties that D.O.'s pursue.
Still, there is no doubt that osteopathic medicine, as a progressive social movement, has influenced the general practice of American medicine. Indeed, some osteopathic medical schools in the USA have opened basic courses in osteopathic manual therapy for their M.D. colleagues. Many continuing medical education programs in osteopathic manipulation are also offered to M.D.'s and physical therapists.
Over 120 years after its founding, the field continues to struggle with core identity issues. While it interfaces, cooperates, and allies itself with the standard biomedical enterprise and industries, it simultaneously retains and defends its own distinct professional identity if for no other reasons than historical or sentimental ones.
Osteopathic medicine first developed its unique and proprietary treatment modalities in the early 19th century as a distinct alternative to conventional medical practice. These modalities moved through stages of discovery, development, refinement, and translation in order to be integrated into a modern biomedically-oriented osteopathic educational curriculum. This curriculum was instituted in largely free-standing educational institutions, community hospitals, and clinics that were relatively isolated from well-established scientific and medical training centers. Both internal and external competing interests shaped this process in a largely serendipitous fashion.
Recently the movement, including its professional organizations, colleges, and specialty societies, has gone to great lengths to define itself in terms of its holistic system of diagnosis and treatment. Critics point out that such a definition implies that the field is somehow separate from mainstream medicine and question if this definition is in reality a false distinction. Others prefer to view the field as being complementary to mainstream medicine by offering a form of patient care and health services that encompasses and extends usual medical practice. This duality does not invalidate it as a medical philosophy, but it makes it difficult for researchers and policy makers to measure its overall contribution to the health care system. In either case, given its recent unprecedented growth and expansion, osteopathic medicine is about to embark on a new phase in its social evolution. It has tenuously positioned itself as a bridge between medical care that is conventionally considered evidence based medicine versus complementary and alternative medicine. It has developed and implemented a network of colleges, post-graduate training institutions, professional organizations, federally-recognized professional certification standards, hospitals and health care networks in order to deliver a package of health services based on a distinct worldview of patient care.
However, to secure its relevance in a modern, integrated health care system, its success will depend upon conscientious organizational leadership, the stewardship of its academic community, and continued long-term investment in research infrastructure. This will be needed in order to demonstrate cost-effective, positive treatment effects for the services it provides. In order to sustain and perpetuate itself as a social movement within medicine and the health care industry, it will need to attract and garner the support of recent osteopathic medical graduates comprising a generation of osteopathic physicians who have benefited from widespread acceptance, unrestricted practice opportunities, and post-graduate training and mentorship that has occurred, to a large degree, outside of the osteopathic profession.
Medicine | Manipulative therapy
Osteopathie (Behandlungsform) | Osteopatía | Ostéopathie | אוסטאופתיה | Osteopathie | オステオパシー
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