Abstract

BackgroundIn a nationally representative sample of United States Medicare beneficiaries, we examined the extent of chiropractic use, factors associated with seeing a chiropractor, and predictors of the volume of chiropractic use among those having seen one.MethodsWe performed secondary analyses of baseline interview data on 4,310 self-respondents who were 70 years old or older when they first participated in the Survey on Assets and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD). The interview data were then linked to their Medicare claims. Multiple logistic and negative binomial regressions were used.ResultsThe average annual rate of chiropractic use was 4.6%. During the four-year period (two years before and two years after each respondent's baseline interview), 10.3% had one or more visits to a chiropractor. African Americans and Hispanics, as well as those with multiple depressive symptoms and those who lived in counties with lower than average supplies of chiropractors were much less likely to use them. The use of chiropractors was much more likely among those who drank alcohol, had arthritis, reported pain, and were able to drive. Chiropractic services did not substitute for physician visits. Among those who had seen a chiropractor, the volume of chiropractic visits was lower for those who lived alone, had lower incomes, and poorer cognitive abilities, while it was greater for the overweight and those with lower body limitations.ConclusionChiropractic use among older adults is less prevalent than has been consistently reported for the United States as a whole, and is most common among Whites, those reporting pain, and those with geographic, financial, and transportation access.

Highlights

  • In a nationally representative sample of United States Medicare beneficiaries, we examined the extent of chiropractic use, factors associated with seeing a chiropractor, and predictors of the volume of chiropractic use among those having seen one

  • Data We conducted a secondary analysis of the baseline interview data from the Survey on Assets and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD), which is sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in the United States

  • African Americans and Hispanics, as well as those with multiple depressive symptoms and those who lived in counties with lower than average supplies of chiropractors were much less likely to use them

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Summary

Introduction

In a nationally representative sample of United States Medicare beneficiaries, we examined the extent of chiropractic use, factors associated with seeing a chiropractor, and predictors of the volume of chiropractic use among those having seen one. The NHIS estimate, was based principally upon a broader question referring to praying for one's own health, which 43% of that American sample reported doing This anomaly aside, prevalence estimates for the use of the most identifiable form of CAM – chiropractic services – in the United States have been generally consistent. The prevalence estimates for chiropractic use from the three largest CAM studies in the United States are very tightly clustered at 6.8%, 7.5%, and 7.6% [4,7,8] This range is consistent with the lower end of a more recent descriptive review in this journal of 137 articles that involved chiropractic and CAM utilization [9]. That review found that rates of chiropractic use varied considerably among these smaller, more parochial studies, they mostly fell within a 6–12% range [9]

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