Whereas, the welfare of the patient is paramount; and
Whereas, chiropractic education should be of the highest quality and be founded on the principles of evidence-based care 1; and
Whereas, curricula should be responsive to changing patient, societal and community needs and expectations within a modern health care system;
Whereas, the chiropractic education should be able to demonstrate identifiable outcomes which are linked to the Position on Implementation;
we, the undersigned chiropractic educational institutions, state as follows:
Statement 1 Chiropractic education and training must acknowledge the biopsychosocial model of health care and be underpinned by biologically plausible theories and peer-reviewed research. It should embrace the value of clinical experience, shared decision-making and a patient-centered approach to care. |
Position on Implementation
Teachings outside the above should either be removed as part of the core curriculum or alternatively be taught in a historical context. |
Statement 2 Upon graduation, chiropractic students should be equipped to work effectively and collaboratively to deliver improved quality of life outcomes for patients with musculoskeletal disorders. This will, of necessity, incorporate:
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Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
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Statement 3 Wherever possible, chiropractic educational programs should form or develop affiliations with established public and private universities preferably within a medical or health science faculty. Such links may develop opportunities for interprofessional education and collaborative practice. |
Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
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Statement 4 Chiropractic educational institutions should support their faculties in the provision of innovative models for the development of knowledge, learning and skills. These should focus on facilitating scholarly activity including research, interprofessional education and teaching within the context of emerging health care models. |
Position on Implementation Chiropractic faculty should have clearly identifiable opportunities to upgrade their:
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Statement 5 The teaching of vertebral subluxation complex as a vitalistic2 construct that claims or implies that it is the cause of or contributes to disease is unsupported by evidence. Its inclusion in a modern chiropractic curriculum in anything other than an historical context is therefore inappropriate and unnecessary. |
Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
Teaching of non-evidence-based theoretical explanatory models underpinning the manual clinical interventions should be removed from the curriculum or be taught in a historical context. |
Statement 6 Chiropractic education should reflect ethical practice and professional standards throughout the curriculum. Upon graduation, students must understand their responsibilities to their patients, their communities and to the profession. |
Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
Teachings outside the above should either be removed as part of the core curriculum or alternatively be taught in a historical context. |
Statement 7 Practice styles3, which may contribute to inappropriate patient dependence, compromise patient confidentiality or require repeated exposure to ionising radiation are not part of an undergraduate chiropractic curriculum. Students should be taught to recognise that such approaches are not acceptable in terms of the best interests of patients or the chiropractic profession. |
Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
Teachings outside the above should either be removed as part of the core curriculum or alternatively be taught in a historical context. |
Statement 8 Immunization. The chiropractic programs below support the World Health Organization ‘WHO’s vision and mission in immunization and vaccines - 2015-20304. |
Position on Implementation The curriculum must clearly identify opportunities for students to demonstrate:
Teachings outside the above should either be removed as part of the current curriculum or alternatively be taught in a historical context. |
1 Sackett DL, Rosenberg WM, Gray JA, Haynes RB, Richardson WS. Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't. BMJ. 1996;312(7023):71-2.
2 Specifically the form of vitalism as distinct from holism that proclaims ‘If the specific vertebral subluxation is correctly adjusted, interference is released, pressure is eliminated, carrying capacity restored to normal, tissue cell is re-established, and life and health begin to regrow back to normal. All this is directed, controlled, and performed by INNATE INTELLIGENCE’ (Ref: BJP Fame and Fortune Vol. XXXIII)
3 Practice styles refers to routine ‘high volume’ chiropractic care models, ‘open plan’ chiropractic care models and the delivery of unsubstantiated ‘treatment packages’ or clinical techniques.
4‘WHO’s vision and mission in immunization and vaccines - 2015-2030’. Accessed 18th. August, 2020.
This document is based upon and supports the theme of the World Federation of Chiropractic Educational Statement formulated in November 2014 at the Miami Education Conference.
The Education Position Statement can also be downloaded as a pdf-file.