Most people will, at some point in their life, experience back or neck pain. Many people go under the knife for back surgery thinking that surgery is going to be the magic bullet that fixes all of their problems and that the results will last forever. After many of these back surgeries fail leaving patients in the same amount of pain or even worse, patients wonder if they shouldn’t have exhausted all of their nor-surgical options first. Now, unfortunately they have scar tissue and sometimes even rods, screws, or metal which may disqualify them for many effective treatments such as spinal decompression.
Here’s an excerpt from an article that appeared on Boston.com, about a report from the Journal of the American Medical Association. The article claims that while we are spending astronomical sums on back pain relief…the problem is not getting any better. “The traditional solutions simply DO NOT WORK!”
Here are just a few telling quotes:
“We’re putting a lot of money into this problem…but we’re not seeing health status commensurate with those investments…The nation is losing its battle against back pain.”
~ Brook I. Martin, Department of Orthopedics and Sports Medicine at the University of Washington
Some doctors have questioned whether surgeries, injections, and narcotic pain medications are being used inappropriately. “I think the truth is we have perhaps oversold what we have to offer,”
~ Richard A. Deyo, Oregon Health & Science University in Portland
“[A]ll the drug treatments, all the operations have some benefit for some patients. But I think in each of those situations we’ve begun using those tests or treatments more widely than science would really support.”
~ Richard A. Deyo, Oregon Health & Science University in Portland
Another Doctor had this to say about surgery. “If you have a screwdriver, everything looks like a screw. There will be a lot of people doing the wrong thing for back pain for a long time until we get it figured out. I just hope we don’t hurt too many people in the process”.
~ Spine, December 2001 Issue, Dr. Seth Waldman Sees patients of failed surgery at Hospital for Special Surgery.
The April 8, 2002 Issue of New Yorker Online Magazine found that of patients who had Spinal Surgery… 72% needed Further Surgery!