25 Years of Whiplash Research

SOURCE:   The American Chiropractor ~ September 2010

An interview with Arthur Croft, D.C.

Dr. Croft is the Founding Director of the Spine Research Institute of San Diego. He has been actively engaged in whiplash research for the past twenty-five years and has co-authored a best-selling textbook on whiplash (Whiplash Injuries: the Cervical Acceleration/Deceleration Syndrome, 3rd edition, 2002) and temporomandibular joint disorders (Whiplash and Temporomandibular Disorders: an Interdisciplinary Approach to Case Management), along with several other books, textbook chapters, and over 320 professional papers. He was the original developer of the now widely used whiplash (WAD) grading system, as well as the widely adopted treatment guidelines. Dr. Croft wrote and produced the Emmy-nominated video Whiplash, and the most recent human subjects crash test DVD’s, Machine vs. Man I and II and is the only chiropractic physician to conduct ongoing, full scale human volunteer crash testing.

Dr. Croft is a biomechanist, a trauma epidemiologist, and chiropractic orthopaedist and lectures extensively in the United States and abroad. He serves on the editorial boards of several professional peer-reviewed chiropractic, medical, and engineering journals, including Spine, Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, SAE, JMPT, DC Tracts, Journal of Musculoskeletal Pain, Chiropractic Technique, and is a senior editor of the Journal of Whiplash-Related Disorders. He has served as faculty of University of California, San Diego, Southern California University of Health Sciences, Western States Chiropractic College, and New York Chiropractic College. In addition to his own research, Dr. Croft has contributed to several research steering committees and has participated in RAND projects, including the cervical spine manipulation study, and has served as a grant reviewer for the Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Croft is also a certified accident reconstructionist (NUTI). He currently serves as a panelist on the International Whiplash Task Force. Dr. Croft’s focus is public health and injury prevention and he is very close to receiving his PhD in epidemiology.

In an interview with The American Chiropractor (TAC), Dr. Croft shares some of the wisdom his studies have distilled.

TAC:   Dr. Croft, please tell our readers a bit about some of the things you have been able to discover regarding whiplash through research.

Croft:   Most of the discoveries concerning the whiplash phenomenon have come from the eight years of human subject crash testing we’ve done at the Spine Research Institute of San Diego. In many cases, our findings have been new and innovative and, in other cases, they have served to support or extend previous research or theory. We’ve found, for example, that occupant kinematics and biomechanics is much more complicated than previously thought and that smaller persons and larger persons have very different responses. [1] A small female will experience two to four times the head linear acceleration as a larger male in the same crash. The male, however, will experience greater rearward bending.

We’ve compared frontal and rear impact collisions under identical crash conditions. [2-3] We’ve tested the standard crash test dummy (HYBRID III) and the newer, biofidelic rear impact dummies (RID2 and BioRID II). In all cases, this was the first research to actually compare human and dummy responses on a validation platform under the same crash conditions. [8-9]

We’ve evaluated Saab’s antiwhiplash seat in a direct comparison to standard car seats. We’re the only group, to date, that has followed up with long-term surveillance of crash test volunteers using digital incliniometry, algometry, and multiple upright MRI with flexion and extension.

Unlike reports from some crash testing, we’ve documented injuries in about 30 percent of volunteers. We’ve also evaluated some standard accident reconstruction methodologies, such as the momentum/energy/restitution (MER) method and shown that it is not uniformly reliable. [6] We’ve evaluated event data recorders (EDR)—the car’s black box that records acceleration during a crash—and compared it to a gold standard data from highly sophisticated and calibrated accelerometers. Its accuracy turns out to be nonlinear, falling off at lower crash speeds. We’ve shown that 45 percent of all chronic cervical spine pain is likely the result of motor vehicle crash injury. [12] These are just some highlights of the many results and findings we’ve gained from crash testing. And then we’ve done some population-based studies [10-11] and clinical studies as well. [13]

TAC:   How do you feel the chiropractic profession is prepared to deal with CAD-type injuries?

Croft:   To be frank, most chiropractors don’t have much formal training in whiplash traumatology because the curriculum in our schools doesn’t include it. I recognized this in my first year of practice and, while filling in the gaps in my knowledge, the idea of the whiplash textbook came to life. The first edition came out in 1988 and Whiplash Injuries: the Cervical Acceleration/Deceleration Syndrome is now in its third edition. The educational shortfall, of course, has also led to my seminar series and we provide chiropractic students with a large discount. The problem seems to be that the schools are under pressure to satisfy CCE core requirements on the one hand, and maintain their competitive edge on the other. Adding optional curriculum only extends the duration of the program and makes the school less competitive with other schools. So it is unlikely that students will get more than a lecture or two on whiplash in the future. That’s about all I got at Los Angeles Chiropractic College.

The problems of Personal Injury today are more convoluted than they were in the past. Insurers have made it progressively more challenging for doctors and lawyers over the past two decades, and physicians and lawyers have generally followed one of two paths: either they continue to do the same old thing year after year until they seemed to be swamped at every turn, or they attempt to keep pace with the rapidly evolving strategies. The first group eventually has given up, while the second group is actually able to pick up the slack from the first group. I remember that, in the early 1980’s, we just sent in our bills and we got paid. We wrote narrative reports in cases where there were lawsuits and they seemed to be sufficient, even though—speaking, at least, for myself—I had no idea what I was doing and would probably be mortified to read those reports now.

The world is much more sophisticated today. Not only has an entire new literature developed, but the insurance industry has developed a number of very successful tactics to defeat claims made against them.

TAC:   Can you give us some examples of these new tactics?

Croft:   Chief among them is the MIST defense. This arose out of an Allstate program which was devised by a large consulting firm in the 1990’s. It stands for minor injury, soft tissue. It’s been so successful for Allstate that most major auto insurers have followed suit in one way or another. The chief tactics are to “delay, deny, and defend.”

The way it works is this: When a claim is made against the insurer and the property damage of the claimant’s vehicle is under $1000, the case is automatically “segmented” to the special investigative unit (SIU). This is the fraud investigative arm, so it is a serious issue and can later result in a complaint being filed with the state board of examiners and even trials in front of administrative law judges. The insurers consider this a “soft fraud,” meaning that it is not an outright insurance fraud, but a situation in which medical charges and claimed injuries are excessive or overstated. The end result, however, is that the insurer will use this as a pretext to deny billing.

SIU investigators may call the patient and request an interview. They will ask what the doctor did on various appointments. Usually, patients can rarely verbalize their office visit in detail and usually answer, “I don’t remember.” This will be interpreted to mean that nothing was done—more evidence of fraud.

If there is an attorney on the case, I would advise patients to refer these calls from investigators to the attorney. The most important take-home point from this is that we investigated the correlation between crash damage and three possible outcome parameters: (1) acute injury risk, (2) injury severity, and (3) long-term symptoms. In this meta-analysis of all medical and engineering literature going back to 1970, we found only four relevant studies and they did not support the notion that one could gauge any of these parameters from crash severity. [5] This paper is available as a free download (go to www.medscimonit.com and search under author for “croft”) and should be in the possession of every physician and attorney working within this arena, because it shows, once and for all, that this MIST segmentation policy is not scientifically or empirically based. Instead, it is an arbitrary, cost-saving device for the insurer which is deceptive and entirely bereft of an evidentiary foundation.

The reason it works so well is because low velocity crashes that produce minimal property damage do look trivial to most lay people who see only a photo of the car’s bumper, so the defense can effectively rely on the jurors’ intuition. We produced DVD’s of real crash test footage which more dramatically illustrate what happens in these MIST cases, but most jurors will never get to see these.

Ultimately, to be successful in PI today, DC’s need to have embraced the latest literature. They need to understand crash mechanics, occupant kinematics, and the numerous strategies applied in these cases. Otherwise, they—and their patients—will more likely fall prey to the more robust tactics employed by the defense.

But, let me be clear about one thing: In nearly every case, the defense case is almost entirely based on junk science, innuendo, reliance on faulty “common sense,” and outright deception. If you know how to deal with it, it dissolves like smoke in the wind.

TAC:   Do you have a particular stance with relation to videofluoroscopy?

Croft:   I have been an advocate of videofluoroscopy (VF) since the early 1980’s. It can provide information about the spine that cannot be obtained by other methods. In demonstrating certain types of pathology, therefore, it is unique as a modality.

Having said that, the scant amount of research to date is disappointing. My colleagues and I did some research years ago [4,7] but, as an orthopaedist, I felt that radiologists should be the ones to carry on with that kind of work. Oddly, though, radiologists, with some exceptions, have turned a blind eye to VF, and many appear to be outwardly hostile to it.

I think it is crucial that this profession develop a training and licensing infrastructure for VF. We should also develop a best practices guidelines with respect to indications for it, how it should be performed, and what it should cost. Currently, none of this infrastructure exists. It is also crucial that we invest in more research, beginning with the collection of normative data.

TAC:   What is it about CAD that has captured your imagination and led to the vast database of information that you have been able to accumulate?

Croft:   That’s simple. This is a huge public health problem today in all parts of the world. Every year, in the U.S., three million people are injured this way. Of these, about half will be left with permanent residua and half a million will become disabled to some degree. It has an annual comprehensive cost (i.e., the total cost including lost wages, medical, legal, etc.) of $43 billion, which is about what we spend on diabetes. But, unlike diabetes, whiplash injuries are largely preventable, without resorting to expensive lifelong interventions and dramatic lifestyle changes.

We are interested in ways to (1) prevent crashes, (2) improve crashworthiness to reduce injuries in collisions that are unavoidable, and (3) make treatment more efficacious. All of these are exciting vistas and all of them are being actively and aggressively researched right now. This is, in fact, one of the fastest growing areas of investigation in both medicine and engineering and I am involved in both fields, so “captured” is a very apt term. But I can certainly say that I love my work.

TAC:   Are you currently seeing patients?

Croft:   I see patients in consultation. In some cases, I simply review records and render reports. I do a lot of international work in this manner. In other cases, patients come to California to see me for an examination. They come mostly from the U.S.

I serve as an expert in cases large and small. I think my input is unique, because I can provide an opinion not only as a physician, but also as an epidemiologist, crash test researcher, and biomechanist. Wearing all of these hats means I can provide a sort of polymath opinion for the price of a single expert, while simultaneously obviating the problems of internal disagreement among multiple experts!

TAC:   What is the most common problem you see among chiropractors today?

Croft:   A lack of cohesion and a failure to understand that the old “separate but equal” philosophy is no longer viable. Most chiropractors don’t seem to recognize that we won’t be able to legislatively insulate ourselves from extinction. Many have been falsely buoyed by the Wilke’s case. This merely changed the game plan of chiropractic’s enemies. The erosion of our influence and scope is evident in many states, including California. With a stroke of his pen, long-time chiropractic friend and now Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger sharply limited our place in the workers’ compensation system.

The healthcare world now demands verification and validation. We have not been very responsive in that context. Nor have we been effective in policing our own ranks. Meanwhile, PT’s have been more active in research and now have doctorate (DPT) level programs. They will be looking to have autonomy and to practice manipulation and, if the insurers see them as being more tractable than DC’s have been, watch for a change in reimbursement practices that will favor DPT’s. And the profession won’t be able to sue its way out.

We are also seeing changes in the use of non-physicians—a change also driven by insurers’ profit goals. In many cases now, when patients have surgery, the assistant surgeon is a physician’s assistant (PA) rather than a surgeon. Will there be a corollary in chiropractic?

TAC:   What is the biggest problem or challenge you see in the chiropractic profession today?

Croft:   The biggest challenge is to face the research/validation/cohesion problem mentioned earlier. If the members of this profession would donate just $100 per year to a research fund, we could really accomplish something big. Little science shops like mine have always—with some exceptions—been self-funded. We simply don’t have the budget for really big projects. But that’s what the profession desperately needs.

TAC:   Do you have any recommended marketing strategies that chiropractors can do to attract new patients and/or to keep current patients?

Croft:   Yes. We developed a program called Auto Safety Facts that is designed to provide physicians with the tools to go out to their communities and educate the public in critically important safety issues like head restraint geometry, seat belts, airbags, child protection systems, etc. It is not about chiropractic — it is about safety. Of course, it is also useful in the clinic. Our doctors have had surprisingly good success with it. And, best of all, they are probably actually saving lives and preventing serious injuries in the process. This is the kind of positive PR the profession really needs.

You may contact Dr. Croft at drcroft@san.rr.com, www.srisd.com or by calling the Spine Research Institute of San Diego at 1-619-423-9867.

REFERENCES:

1.   Croft A, Freeman M. The Neck Injury Criterion (NIC): future considerations. 44th Annual Proceedings of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Chicago, IL, 2000:519-21.

2.   Croft A, Haneline M, Freeman M. Differential Occupant Kinematics and Forces Between Frontal and Rear Automobile Impacts at Low Speed: Evidence for a Differential Injury Risk. International Research Council on the Biomechanics of Impact (IRCOBI), International Conference, Munich, German, September 18-20 2002:365-6.

3.   Croft A, Haneline M, Freeman M. Low speed frontal crashes and low speed rear crashes: is there a differential risk for injury? . 46th Annual Proceedings of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine. Tempe, AZ., 2002:79-91.

4.   Croft A, Young D. Videofluoroscopy: a sampling of chiropractic radiologist’s opinions.
Topics Diagn Radiology Adv Imag 1994;2:4-10.

5.   Croft AC, Freeman MD. Correlating crash severity with injury risk, injury severity, and long-term symptoms in low velocity motor vehicle collisions.
Med Sci Monit 2005;11:RA316-21.

6.   Croft AC, Haneline MT, Freeman MD. Automobile crash reconstruction in low speed rear impact crashes utilizing a momentum, energy, and restitution (MER) method. International Congress on Whiplash-Associated Disorders. Berne, Switzerland, 2001:28.

7.   Croft AC, Krage JS, Pate D, et al. Videofluoroscopy of cervical spine trauma-an interinterpreter reliability study.
J Manip Physio Ther 1994;17:20-4.

8.   Croft AC, Philippens MMGM. The RID2 biofidelic rear impact dummy: A pilot study using human subjects in low speed rear impact full scale crash tests.
Accid Anal Prev 2007;39:340-6.

9.   Croft AC, Philippens MMGM. The RID2 biofidelic rear impact dummy: a validation study using human subject in low speed rear impact full scale crash tests. Neck injury criteria (NIC). 2006 SAE World Congress. Detroit, MI: SAE, 2006.

10.   Freeman M, Croft A, Centeno C. Fatal head injury cases in a rural Oregon county. . Proceedings of the 19th World Congress of the International Traffic Medicine Association. Budapest, Hungary, 2003.

11.   Freeman MD, Croft AC, Nicodemus CN, et al. Significant spinal injury resulting from low-level accelerations: a case series of roller coaster injuries.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2005;86:2126-30.

12.   Freeman MD, Croft AC, Rossignol AM, et al. Chronic neck pain and whiplash: a case-control study of the relationship between acute whiplash injuries and chronic neck pain.
Pain Res Manag 2006;11:79-83.

13.   Freeman MD, Sapir D, Boutselis A, et al. Whiplash injury and occult vertebral fracture: a case series of bone SPECT imaging of patients with persisting spine pain following a motor vehicle crash. Cervical Spine Research Society 29th Annual Meeting. Monterey, California, 2001.

Exploring the Diagnostic History of Autism

If you've never actually looked into the diagnostic history of autism, it's worth your time to compare and contrast today's "autism spectrum disorder" with earlier diagnostic labels and symptoms.  I  just came across a nicely-packaged collection of prior descriptions of "autism" as presented in earlier versions of the Diagnostic Manual versions I, II, III and III-R, available at  Roy Grinker's "Unstrange Minds" blog.  It makes intriguing reading!

For example, autism (not ASD as we know it today) was lumped in with childhood schizophrenia until the 1980 DSM III, and was then listed as "infantile autism" with these descriptive criteria:

DSM III (1980)

Diagnostic criteria for Infantile Autism

A. Onset before 30 months of age

B. Pervasive lack of responsiveness to other people (autism)


C. Gross deficits in language development


D. If speech is present, peculiar speech patterns such as immediate and delayed echolalia, metaphorical language, pronominal reversal.


E. Bizarre responses to various aspects of the environment, e.g., resistance to change, peculiar interest in or attachments to animate or inanimate objects.


F. Absence of delusions, hallucinations, loosening of associations, and incoherence as in Schizophrenia.

Even more interesting (to me!)  are the criteria for PDD-NOS, which was first described in the 1980 DSM III.   Based on these criteria, my son would come nowhere NEAR PDD-NOS - his present diagnosis!

DSM-III (1980)

Diagnostic Criteria for Childhood Onset Pervasive Developmental Disorder

A. Gross and sustained impairment in social relationships, e.g., lack of appropriate affective responsivity, Inappropriate clinging, asociality, lack of empathy.

B. At least three of the following:

1. sudden excessive anxiety manifested by such symptoms as free-floating anxiety, catastrophic reactions to everyday occurrences, inability to be consoled when upset, unexplained panic attacks,

2. constricted or inappropriate affect, including lack of appropriate fear reactions, unexplained rage reactions, end extreme mood lability,

3. resistance to change in the environment, e.g., upset if dinner time is changed, or insistence on doing things in the same manner every time, e.g., putting on clothes always in the same order,

4. oddities of motor movement, such as peculiar posturing, peculiar hand or finger movements, or walking on tiptoe,

5. abnormalities of speech, such as question-like melody, monotonous voice,

6. hyper or hypo-sensitivity to sensory stimuli. e.g., byperacusis,

7. self-mutilation, e.g., biting or hitting self, head banging.

C. Onset of the full syndrome after 30 months of age and before 12 years of age.

Absence of delusions, hallucinations, incoherence, or marked loosening of associations.

Exploring these past and future diagnostic criteria has really opened my mind to how idiosyncratic such distinctions really are!  It reminds me forcibly of the classification activities often undertaken in elementary school classrooms.  Kids are broken into groups and given identical collections of 100 buttons, and asked to organize them into groups.  Naturally, each group takes a different approach: some organize by color, some by size, some by number of holes, some by shape, and so forth.  Which organizational approach is correct?  The answer, of course, is "there is no right answer."

Where would you or your child have fit under past diagnostic criteria?  How helpful is the present DSM-IV?  And... how do you feel about the idea that such diagnostic categories are changed and changed again over the course of any individual lifetime?


Exploring the Diagnostic History of Autism originally appeared on About.com Autism on Monday, May 30th, 2011 at 14:19:17.

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In Memory of Those Who Have Fallen

The Bivouac of the Dead

The muffled drum’s sad roll has beat
The soldier’s last tattoo’
No more on life’s parade shall meet
That brave and fallen few;

On Fame’s eternal camping ground
Their silent tents are spread;
But Glory guards with solemn round
The bivouac of the dead.

Let us also remember all those DCs who went to jail for “practicing medicine without a license”, because it was their good fight that sustained the wonderful profession that we have today.

ADHD: Transitioning from School to Summer Break

School is out...or soon will be! If you are a parent of a child with ADHD, I am hoping you will tune into Attention Talk Radio for a show on Transitioning from School to Summer Break. Host Jeff Copper and I will talk about the importance of a summer routine and discuss ways to help make the summer months more manageable, more productive...and more fun!

The show will air beginning Wednesday, June 1 at 8pm EST and will be available to listen to after that time on the Attention Talk Radio website for free. Please be sure to check it out and take some time to look through and listen to the wide range of topics related to ADHD that are on the site. Jeff has created a very valuable audio resource for all of us interested in ADHD.

To learn more go to:
Attention Talk Radio: Transitioning from School to Summer Break

ADHD: Transitioning from School to Summer Break originally appeared on About.com ADD / ADHD on Sunday, May 29th, 2011 at 23:00:33.

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How Do You Feel About Losing the Asperger’s and PDD-NOS Diagnostic Categories?

According to the new DSM-V (now in draft form), two of the five existing formal autism spectrum diagnoses will disappear as of 2013.   These include Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS) and Asperger syndrome.  New categories, including a general "autism spectrum" with multiple levels of severity, will replace those diagnoses.

My sense is that not too many people will mourn the loss of PDD-NOS, which was clear as mud to begin with.

The term Asperger's syndrome, however, has provided an awful lot of people with a sense of identity and a group of peers - and will be much tougher to lose.

How do you feel about these diagnostic categories?  Are they important to keep?  Is it okay to let them go?  Express your views and vote in the poll!


How Do You Feel About Losing the Asperger's and PDD-NOS Diagnostic Categories? originally appeared on About.com Autism on Sunday, May 29th, 2011 at 16:08:38.

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Two New Scholarships Available for Students with ADHD

SHIRE ADHD SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
Award Includes a Year of Coaching to Ease the Transition from High School to College

This unique college scholarship program for students with ADHD is offered from Shire in partnership with the Edge Foundation. Twenty-five graduating high school seniors who will be starting college in the fall of 2011 will receive a $2,000 cash award and a full year of Edge Coaching services to help ease the transition from high school to college. The deadline to apply is July 7, 2011 and scholarships will be awarded on August 9, 2011. Details available at www.ShireADHDScholarship.com.

"What makes this scholarship unique is that, through the generosity of Shire, these students will not only have access to a higher education, but they will receive the tools to help them be successful there," said Robert Tudisco, Executive Director of the Edge Foundation. "The students will set goals and work with their coaches to stay accountable to the goals they have set for themselves. Edge coaches will provide students with the structure, support and accountability their parents provided at home. Edge coaches will help students learn the skills they need to provide these things for themselves."

SARULU BELKOFER SCHOLARSHIP

The Saralu Belkofer Scholarship, offered through Lumin Consulting, is a $2,000 annual college scholarship fund available to students with learning disabilities. In addition to the monetary award, students will be given the option of participating in an internship program in Internet marketing. "As someone with ADD, internet marketing has been an incredibly powerful force in my life," said Spencer Belkofer, Founder of Lumin Consulting. "It inherently magnifies my strengths and minimizes my weaknesses. For example, social media marketing is very similar to my though process....fast sporadic and a bit all over the place." Application deadline is October 1, 2011. Details are available at LuminConsulting.com/scholarship.

Two New Scholarships Available for Students with ADHD originally appeared on About.com ADD / ADHD on Saturday, May 28th, 2011 at 18:22:53.

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U.S. Navy Names DC to Musculoskeletal Board

SOURCE: Dynamic Chiropractic

With his appointment to the board, Dr. William Morgan continues building bridges for the chiropractic profession.

William Morgan, DC, has been appointed to the United States Navy’s Musculoskeletal Continuum of Care Advisory Board (MCCAB), an entity created to address the prevalent musculoskeletal injuries sustained by U.S. armed forces personnel during active-duty operations.

Dr. Morgan, who also serves on the spine subcommittee within MCCAB – members of which include orthopedic surgeons, sports medicine physicians, physical medicine and rehabilitation physicians and physical therapists – will serve as the sole chiropractic representative to MCCAB, the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED) and the U.S. Navy. The spine committee will develop care algorithms for treating musculoskeletal and spinal conditions and in so doing, help determine the future of musculoskeletal management in the U.S. armed forces.

Addressing Musculoskeletal Health Issues in the Armed Forces

The leading cause of medical evacuation from forward-deployed units is musculoskeletal complaints, not combat wounds, with a high percentage of the complaints being back and neck pain. The MCCAB intends to develop guidelines for best practices in the management of musculoskeletal conditions through collaboration between professions, standardized metrics/outcome measurements, evidence-based practices and increased access to care.

William Morgan This is a big step for chiropractic in the armed forces. Never before has a chiropractor been on a military medical board that will have this level of strategic planning and implementation of ideas. This advisory board will make decisions about the future direction of health care within the Navy and the Marine Corps (the Navy provides the medical care for both the Navy and the Marines). The development of the board and Dr. Morgan’s appointment to it suggests the Navy’s open-mindedness in addressing the need for better management of musculoskeletal conditions.

Dr. Morgan’s Long Journey With Navy Health Care

Dr. Morgan has a long history in Navy medicine. Joining the Navy at age 17, he became a hospital corpsman, serving with Marine Corps Infantry and an elite Marine Recon Company. While in the Navy he was qualified in parachuting, military diving, submarine insertion, jungle warfare, combat swimming, explosives, mountaineering, winter warfare, and Arctic survival. He attended anti-terrorist training at the FBI academy. During a deployment to Southeast Asia, Morgan’s unit assisted in the rescue of Vietnamese refugees, whose ship had been attacked by pirates. Morgan provided medical care to the refugees.

After leaving active military service, Morgan began college and transferred to the Navy reserves. He served briefly with a dive and salvage unit and was one of the Navy divers who helped raise the USS Potomac from the San Francisco Bay after she sank in 1980. In 1982, Morgan transferred to a reserve Naval Special Warfare platoon as the unit’s primary hospital corpsman. He was sent to Special Operations Technician training, Coronado, Calif., to learn the principles and practice of dive medicine. For the next eight years he served as a dive medicine corpsman / combat swimmer for a platoon of Navy frogmen in Navy Special Warfare Unit One. (Dr. Morgan is quick to point out that while he served as an operator within a reserve SEAL platoon, his special warfare training took place in Marine Recon, not Navy BUDS.)

Dr. Morgan graduated from Palmer West in 1985 and practiced in California for 13 years. During that time, he pioneered chiropractic care within hospitals. He was credentialed and worked in two hospitals in central California. In 1998, after responding to an advertisement in Dynamic Chiropractic, he accepted a position at the Navy’s premier medical center, National Naval Medical Center (NNMC), Bethesda, Md.

Dr. Morgan has practiced in Bethesda for the past 13 years and works in Navy-supported executive health clinics in the Washington, D.C. region, caring for service members, high-level civilian government leaders, as well as Pentagon leadership. On occasion, Dr. Morgan will make “house calls” or travel with government officials.

While representing chiropractic to the command, Morgan has given scores of lectures to the medical staff. He also lectures on a regular basis to medical residencies and fellowships, and has worked as a consultant to the Veterans Administration and the U.S. Army. He is on faculty at the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences’ Medical School, a professor for New York Chiropractic College, and has worked as adjunct faculty for Cleveland Chiropractic College, Palmer College, National University of Health Sciences and Texas Chiropractic College.

NNMC has been a model for chiropractic internships and fellowships. Fellow NNMC chiropractor Terence Kearney and Dr. Morgan have mentored dozens of chiropractic students over the past 11 years. Dr. Morgan is also the chiropractor for the U.S. Naval Academy’s football team. With his two sons serving in the U.S. military, Dr. Morgan has a strong incentive to ensure that military medicine provides its members with the best care in the world. He has a vision for chiropractic; he likes to say that “military chiropractors are the hands of a grateful nation.”

Real Life ADHD: A DVD Survival Guide for Children and Teens

I am very excited to let you know about this new DVD from mother and son team, Chris Zeigler Dendy and Alex Zeigler. Chris is a renowned expert in teaching and parenting teenagers with ADHD. Alex is an adult with ADHD who not only produced and was the videographer, editor, and host of this DVD, but also co-authored the book, A Bird's-Eye View of Life with ADD and ADHD: Advice From Young Survivors (a survival guide for teens, preteens, and young adults) with Chris in 2003. That is also Alex doing a swan dive off the bike into the water on the cover of the DVD!

Real Life ADHD: A DVD Survival Guide for Children and Teens is one of the first DVDs produced specifically for children and teens with the young people themselves in leading roles. 30 kids from across the country ranging in age from 12 to 21 speak from their own personal experiences. Parents will enjoy watching, as well, and learning more about the challenges and emotions teens frequently experience growing up with ADHD.

Hosted by two adult ADHDers: Alex and his high school friend, Lewis Alston, a popular Atlanta Radio DJ/VJ, the teens in Real Life ADHD provide up-to-date scientific facts plus advice on 5 common ADHD challenges: inattention, disorganization, forgetfulness, impulsivity, and hyperactivity. In addition, medication is addressed from the teens' perspective and Dr. Ted Mandelkorn shares insights as a physician who not only specializes in treating ADHD, but also has ADHD.

To learn more about the Real Life ADHD visit www.chrisdendy.com

Real Life ADHD: A DVD Survival Guide for Children and Teens originally appeared on About.com ADD / ADHD on Friday, May 27th, 2011 at 19:53:06.

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Who Will Be Autistic in 2013? Learn More About the New Diagnostic Criteria

As many of you know, the American Psychiatric Association is in the process of revamping the DSM - the diagnostic manual that names and describes the symptoms of mental, neurological and developmental disorders for practitioners in the United States and, to some degree, in other nations.  The present criteria for Autism Spectrum Disorders are in for some huge changes if the proposed criteria are approved.  Some of these changes include the removal of the categories Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS) and Asperger Syndrome.  The new criteria for Autism Spectrum Disorder are quite different, too: many people who were once included in that group will no longer fit the criteria.

Meanwhile, a whole slew of new and related disorders and categories are listed, including, among others:

You'll want to explore the entire proposed DSM-V, but for now you may be interested in the criteria for Autism Spectrum Disorder, below.  As you'll see, the emphasis is on perseverative and repetitive behaviors - and there is some very odd language that seems to suggest that a person with "general developmental delays" may not also be eligible for an autism diagnosis.   From what I can tell, my son - who has significant language and social communication issues but few perseverative or repetitive behaviors, and presently has a PDD-NOS  - will no longer fit into the autism category.  He may, instead, wind up with a Social Communication Disorder diagnosis.

If you're like me, you're teeming with questions.  Will my child (or I) need to be rediagnosed?  If so, what will a different diagnosis mean to me or to the services, treatments and educational program I now have in place?  If I have Asperger syndrome, will I now be "autistic?"  Or will I fit into a completely different category?   If my child has anxiety in addition to autism spectrum symptoms, will he be dually diagnosed?  I have requested an interview with a representative of the committee, and hope to find out much more about the new criteria and what they will mean to us.  This is just the first of many blogs and articles I'll be writing on this topic!

Proposed New Criteria for Autism Spectrum Disorder

Must meet criteria A, B, C, and D:

A.    Persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction across contexts, not accounted for by general developmental delays, and manifest by all 3 of the following:

1.     Deficits in social-emotional reciprocity; ranging from abnormal social approach and failure of normal back and forth conversation through reduced sharing of interests, emotions, and affect and response to total lack of initiation of social interaction,

2.     Deficits in nonverbal communicative behaviors used for social interaction; ranging from poorly integrated- verbal and nonverbal communication, through abnormalities in eye contact and body-language, or deficits in understanding and use of nonverbal communication, to total lack of facial expression or gestures.

3.     Deficits in developing and maintaining relationships, appropriate to developmental level (beyond those with caregivers); ranging from difficulties adjusting behavior to suit different social contexts through difficulties in sharing imaginative play and  in making friends  to an apparent absence of interest in people

B.    Restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities as manifested by at least two of  the following:

1.     Stereotyped or repetitive speech, motor movements, or use of objects; (such as simple motor stereotypies, echolalia, repetitive use of objects, or idiosyncratic phrases).

2.     Excessive adherence to routines, ritualized patterns of verbal or nonverbal behavior, or excessive resistance to change; (such as motoric rituals, insistence on same route or food, repetitive questioning or extreme distress at small changes).

3.     Highly restricted, fixated interests that are abnormal in intensity or focus; (such as strong attachment to or preoccupation with unusual objects, excessively circumscribed or perseverative interests).

4.     Hyper-or hypo-reactivity to sensory input or unusual interest in sensory aspects of environment; (such as apparent indifference to pain/heat/cold, adverse response to specific sounds or textures, excessive smelling or touching of objects, fascination with lights or spinning objects).

C.    Symptoms must be present in early childhood (but may not become fully manifest until social demands exceed limited capacities)

D.         Symptoms together limit and impair everyday functioning.

Who Will Be Autistic in 2013? Learn More About the New Diagnostic Criteria originally appeared on About.com Autism on Friday, May 27th, 2011 at 09:44:43.

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Pressed About Skeletal Injuries, Army Chief Cites Soldiers’ Poor Health

SOURCE: The Hill ~ The Congressional News Paper

By John T. Bennett

The Senate’s top appropriator is concerned about injuries spawned by the weight of gear soldiers carry into combat, but Army brass say the poor health of America’s youth is to blame also.

As the Army and other military services have fielded more and more advanced combat gear — especially electronics equipment — U.S. troops have been instructed to strap more and more weight to their bodies.

That means injuries, which does not sit well with Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), a decorated World War II Army veteran. He said his combat pack and gear never weighed more than 25 pounds.

The average Army trooper’s gear now approaches 125 pounds, Inouye said, noting a 2001 Army Science Board study recommended no soldier should carry more than 50 pounds at a time.

During an Appropriations Defense subcommittee hearing Wednesday, Inouye told Army leaders he was “shocked” by a recent Johns Hopkins University study that found musculoskeletal spinal injuries are now “double that of combat injuries.”

What’s more, “musculoskeletal injuries have increased tenfold in the last four years,” Inouye said. “The cost of medical benefits or disability benefits exceed annually $500 million.”

Army Chief of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey replied that the matter is a “constant issue” for service leaders, and one that crosses his desk at least once a week.

“We’ve made some progress with plate carriers, the weight of the helmet, the weight of optics on the rifle, the weight of the boots,” Dempsey told Inouye. “But, frankly, those are kind of marginal changes.”

The new Army chief acknowledged soldiers’ loads have swelled in recent years because they have been ordered to carry more and more electronics equipment — which means batteries and power sources.

“We’ve introduced so many new emitters that we’ve increased the burden, because of batteries required to run the emitters, because we’ve connected the soldier to this network,” the chief said.

One way to ease the load might be to develop and field some kind of “automotive mule” that would carry a portion of the gear instead of individual troopers, Dempsey said.

But as the hearing was about to be gaveled closed, Dempsey brought up another factor in the spike in injuries.

“We’ve also discovered young men and women coming into the Army are not as fit or skeletally sound as you were,” the top Army officer told Inouye.

He chalked that up to “the proliferation of bad nutritional habits and carbonated beverages.”

“Even in basic training, before we load the soldier with the gear… we have these same musculoskeletal injuries,” Dempsey said. “It’s really a generation of young Americans that have this problem, but it’s exacerbated by this load that we ask them to bear.”

The Centers for Disease Control found that 17 percent of U.S. individuals ages two through 19 were obese in 2008. Experts say those figures have likely risen since CDC last compiled obesity data.

A Critical Piece of Quality Documentation:Outcomes Assessment

SOURCE: American Chiropractor 2011 (May) 33 (5): 28-34

by Steven Yeomans, D.C.

Today more than ever, chiropractors are faced with the challenge of running a busy practice and, at the same time, juggling the documenting requirements in light of Medicare audits, proving “medical necessity” to private insurers, and producing documentation that minimizes risk in this litigious world. The requirement of creating a legible, concise account of the patient encounter that includes patient centered functional goals and methods of tracking functional improvements that occur during care, emphasizes the need for the inclusion of outcomes assessment tools in the documentation process. The goal of this article is to provide you with the “knowledge ammunition” needed to accomplish this task without expending volumes of time and effort.

Outcomes assessment tool availability is not a new concept. Back in the 1970’s, long, impractical outcomes tools surfaced that were too cumbersome for routine use in a primary care setting, but shortly thereafter, in 1980, Fairbank introduced the Oswestry (Low Back) Disability Index (ODI). An interesting point is that the original purpose of the ODI was to identify patients that may require “…positive intervention” in the form of psychological care when scores exceeded 60% (defined as “crippled”).

However, it was (also) found to be an effective tool to be used in serial manner to show patient progress over time and identify endpoints of care or plateaus in progress, prompting a change in the treatment planning for the patient. This was followed by other “gold standard” tools including the Roland-Morris Low Back Disability Questionnaire in 1984, and the chiropractic contribution of Vernon and Mior’s Neck Disability Index in 1988.

A gradual increase in the use of these tools occurred in the 1990’s with introduction of many other condition specific tools for headaches, dizziness, carpal tunnel, shoulder pain, hip, knee, and ankle pain, as well as general health tools, and psychometric tools for depression and anxiety assessment. In fact, there are now so many tools available, it may be quite a challenge to decide which ones are most important.

Because chiropractic is generally considered a non-surgical, non-pharmaceutical, form of health delivery with an emphasis in treating neuromusculoskeletal complaints, there are two main domains or areas of importance to track. These include pain, since pain drives patient satisfaction and also drives people into our offices, and functional scales that measure activity tolerance. However, as primary care providers, we have to consider the whole person, not just the biological portion and, hence, tracking psychosocial issues became strongly recommended in the early 1990’s.

It became clear in the literature during the 1990’s and 2000’s that barriers to recovery were not due to a “bad sprain or disc condition” (i.e., the “biological” issues), but rather things like depression, anxiety, coping, and fear-avoidance of activity have consistently been found to impede recovery. In order to embrace this “biopsychosocial model,” the concept of designing one questionnaire to cover all three domains (pain, disability/activity tolerance, and psychosocial issues), a multi-domain, “hybrid” questionnaire was introduced.

First introduced in 1999, is a short, easy to complete (for the patient) and score (for the health care provider) hybrid instrument called the Back-Bournemouth Questionnaire (BQ) was introduced that truly embraced the biopsychosocial model. This was unique, as it tracked these three important domains or categories (anxiety, depression and locus of control).

The importance of this contribution cannot be over emphasized, as this allows the health care provider to quickly identify those that are more likely to fail to respond to treatment due to psychometric barriers to recovery and promotes prompt management options (an emphasis of active care and promotion of self-management) for this more challenging patient. A neck specific version of the BQ was introduced in 2001 (Neck-Bournemouth Questionnaire), again, including the three domains of pain, activity tolerance, and psychosocial factors.

Read the rest of this valuable Full Text article at our Outcomes Section:

You may also want to review the complete:
Outcome Assessment Questionnaires Section

Do People with Asperger Syndrome Lack a Moral Compass?

Is Asperger syndrome a disorder which, in itself, can lead to criminal activity?

I've been surprised by the responses I've received to an earlier blog on the subject.   While I assumed that most people would agree with me that an "Asperger's defense" for the rape and murder of a small child makes no sense and undermines the position of people with AS in general, several readers have taken a very different stance.  Here's a recent comment from a reader called Zusia:

A person with AS alone could argue that the following Asperger's criteria is what caused them to act in a morally inappropriate or criminally offensive way:

(1) encompassing preoccupation with one or more stereotyped and restricted patterns of interest that is abnormal either in intensity or focus
(2) apparently inflexible adherence to specific, nonfunctional routines or rituals

Number 1 covers the most ground because people with AS can indeed have some really bizarre patterns of interest. If a person with AS is intensely focused on trains to the point of engaging in repeated criminal activity, as we've seen in more than one recent news story, another person with AS could be intensely focused on child pornography, say, and unable to control himself sexually, due to the compulsion, when in the presence of a child. A resulting death would most likely be totally accidental as the person comes to grasp with his compulsion and what to do to avoid getting caught.

Number 2 acknowledges ritualistic behavior which, again, speaks to a compulsive nature.

Both the train stalking criminal and the child stalking criminal should be held accountable for breaking the law but the acts themselves can and should be interpreted with Asperger's in mind.

I'm not familiar with the specific cases Zusia mentions, but it disturbs me deeply that members of the autism community are quite comfortable with the idea that Asperger syndrome in and of itself could easily be the cause of violent crimes including the rape and murder of a child.

Granted that AS obviously includes compulsive behaviors, can rape and murder be included among those compulsions?   Do people with AS really lack a moral compass to the degree that violent crime is a common symptom?

Please tell me this is not the case, at least in the vast majority of cases - unless AS is accompanied by major mental illness, delusions or other unrelated issues.


Do People with Asperger Syndrome Lack a Moral Compass? originally appeared on About.com Autism on Wednesday, May 25th, 2011 at 16:40:14.

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New Podcast Episode: Paul Dougherty, DC talks about Chiropractic in the VA Hospitals, the American Public Health Association and his Latest Research

PodcastThere are new opportunities opening up every day for integrated chiropractic professionals and with those opportunities, there are an increasing number of non-traditional chiropractors out there. And though many chiropractors may feel they are precluded from certain positions, Dr. Paul Dougherty has broken through many perceived boundaries. He is truly blazing new trails for the profession. He is a faculty member at New York Chiropractic College and also a clinical faculty member in Department of Orthopedics at University of Rochester School of Medicine. Dr. Dougherty serves as a clinician and research scientist at the VA (Veterans Health Administration), and chair of the American Public Health Association Chiropractic Section. Dr. Dougherty spoke live in the OnTheOtherHand studio with podcast host Dr. Brett Kinsler.

Dr. Dougherty spoke about the pros and cons of practicing chiropractic in a salaried system, the model of the VA clinics for the civilian world, advantages of an integrated EHR and the clinical trials he’s running including those involving clinical prediction rules, functional MRI and psychosocial factors of back pain.

Search “OnTheOtherHand Podcast” on iTunes or click here.

Measuring Autism Rates: Who Gets to Make the Diagnosis?

A new study published in the journal Pediatrics finds that - according to parental report - autism, ADHD and a number of other behavioral and developmental issues were on the rise, at least between 1997 and 2008.    Today, 15% or about 1:6 of our kids have a developmental diagnosis.  Of course, this is not big news to most readers of this blog, though it may be bigger news to the world at large.

What IS clear is that more kids were (and presumably are) diagnosed.  What ISN'T clear, of course, is why!  According to NPR:

Fifteen percent of American children have a developmental disability, including autism and ADHD, according to a new report from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That's an increase of almost 2 percentage points from 1997 to 2008, or almost 2 million kids. But that number may be squishier than it sounds.

The new figure comes from the National Health Interview Surveys, which ask parents if their children have ever been diagnosed with a variety of behavioral and developmental problems. That can include assessments by teachers or counselors, so the number is less than airtight. The number also could reflect increasing awareness of autism, and decreasing stigma.

The results were published online by the journal Pediatrics.

The question of how many children have autism has become a huge political issue, used to argue for more funding for early intervention, special ed classes, and insurance coverage. The numbers have also been used in battles over possible causes of autism.

Various studies have put the number of American children with autism as between 1 in 80 and 1 in 240....

As with all things epidemiological, the autism numbers may also be influenced by how hard you look. Earlier this month, researchers reported on an exhaustive effort to identify children with autism spectrum disorders in Goyang, South Korea.

They found that 2.64 percent of the children in the community had an ASD. That's one-and-a-half times the almost 1 percent often used as an average in the U.S. and in Europe. Two-thirds of the children identified in the Korean study were in regular schools, and were diagnosed only by the use of screening tests.

In the new CDC report, the autism rate as reported by parents rose from .02 percent to 0.7 percent. The number of children with an ADHD diagnosis rose from 5.7 percent to 7.6 percent. Boys were twice as likely as girls to be reported as having a developmental problem.

The difficulty with studies like the two described above (in the United States and Korea) is that the process of finding and identifying individuals with various developmental differences keeps changing.  The same is the case with another study which looked at numbers of adults with autism in the UK (and found a similar 1:100).

In Korea and the UK, researchers actually went out searching for unidentified individuals on the autism spectrum, and of course their methods of finding and diagnosing the disorder varied.  In this most recent Pediatrics article (based on the CDC survey):  "Parent-reported diagnoses of the following were included: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; intellectual disability; cerebral palsy; autism; seizures; stuttering or stammering; moderate to profound hearing loss; blindness; learning disorders; and/or other developmental delays."

While it seems clear that we are seeing higher and higher numbers related to autism, ADHD and similar developmental disorders, it's hard to draw smart conclusions when apples are compared to oranges.  It's also important to remember that the numbers cited in this particular Pediatrics study end almost four years ago - an eternity in the autism universe.

For more on the subject of autism prevalence, read:


Measuring Autism Rates: Who Gets to Make the Diagnosis? originally appeared on About.com Autism on Tuesday, May 24th, 2011 at 08:42:18.

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Are Chiropractors Protecting Patients From Medical Care?

SOURCE: Dynamic Chiropractic

By Donald M. Petersen Jr., BS, HCD(hc), FICC(h), Publisher

“[C]hiropractors might be preventing some of their patients from receiving procedures of unproven cost utility value or dubious efficacy.” This quote comes from the latest study revealing chiropractic’s superiority to “traditional medical approaches.” Titled “Health Maintenance Care in Work-Related Low Back Pain and Its Association With Disability Recurrence,” the study was published in the April 2011 issue of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine. [1]

The study compares “physical therapy, chiropractic and (medical) physician services” as they relate to disability and health maintenance. As our front-page article underscores, investigators found that “the likelihood of recurrent disability due to LBP (low back pain) for recipients of services during the health maintenance care period by all other provider groups was consistently worse when compared with recipients of health maintenance care by chiropractors.”

The authors state that “by visiting only or mostly a chiropractor or becoming a chiropractic loyalist, the patients do not receive other traditional medical approaches.” While this is obvious, it is no less significant because those who do receive traditional medical care experienced a greater likelihood of recurrent disability.

What makes the quote at the beginning of this article even more interesting is that the “procedures of unproven cost utility value and dubious efficacy” are those offered by the MDs and PTs. What will make this point even more powerful to most readers is that the lead author of this study is himself a medical doctor.

A few paragraphs later, the authors note that “the only and mostly chiropractic group during the disability episode and health maintenance care periods and ‘chiropractic loyalists’ during both periods combined had fewer surgeries, used fewer opioids, and had lower costs for medical care than the other provider groups.” Could low back pain “surgeries” and “opioids” (as well as other drugs) be considered among the “procedures of unproven cost utility value and dubious efficacy” the authors were referring to?

That’s the way it reads to me.

As I read this study, it is an open indictment of the “traditional medical approaches” used on low back pain patients who are recovering from a disabling injury or have recovered and are hoping to maintain their health. Something none of us ever expected to read in a medical journal.

The data ultimately leads the scientists to the following conclusion: “After controlling for demographic factors and multiple severity indicators, patients suffering nonspecific work-related LBP who received health services mostly or only from a chiropractor had a lower risk of recurrent disability than the risk of any other provider type. Even without an improvement in days until recurrent disability, our findings seem to support the use of chiropractor services, as chiropractor services generally cost less than services from other providers. If a lower rate of disability recurrence in work-related LBP cases for chiropractors holds true, it is important to identify the mechanism of action.”

What a great way to end a study published in a scientific journal – by calling for more research into how chiropractic works and what makes chiropractic more effective.

This is the third of three great studies to appear in print in the past few months that suggest the benefits and even superiority of chiropractic care. [2-3] While we still have a ways to go, I believe the mindset among some of the members of the scientific community is beginning to shift toward an unbiased consideration of chiropractic.

You may also enjoy our 3-17-2011 Blog posting about this article:
New LBP Study Reveals Chiropractic Is Superior to PT and MD Care

References:

1. Health Maintenance Care in Work-Related Low Back Pain and Its Association With Disability Recurrence
J Occup Environ Med, 2011 Apr;53(4):396-404.

2. Manipulation or microdiskectomy for sciatica? A prospective randomized clinical study
J Manipulative Physiol Ther, 2010 (Oct); 33 (8): 576-84

3. The Chiropractic Hospital-based Interventions Research Outcomes (CHIRO) Study: A Randomized Controlled Trial on the Effectiveness of Clinical Practice Guidelines in the Medical and Chiropractic Management of Patients with Acute Mechanical Low Back Pain
Spine J. 2010 (Dec); 10 (12): 1055-1064