|
Sharon Mathiason's letter to the OMA about the Ontario Chiropractic Association campaign to Ontario doctors - Ontario Medical Review - Oct. 99. This letter is not on their web site.
Chiropractic statement to Ontario physicians "inaccurate, misleading"
Dear Editor:
Earlier this year, family physicians and neurologists in the province of
Ontario received a letter from the president of the Ontario Chiropractic
Association in which the death of my daughter, Laurie Jean Mathiason, is
discussed.
The death of my 20-year-old daughter has been very painful, but to have her
death discussed with the medical profession of Ontario, without giving me
any notice or ability to comment, has been an additional source of anguish.
Furthermore, the letter contains some inaccurate statements which I feel
must be corrected and, perhaps more importantly, fails to communicate to
physicians the important clinical practice lessons which may be learned
from the death of my daughter.
Prominent in the communication with physicians is the statement that this
is the first death following chiropractic treatment in Canada. The letter
fails to mention evidence produced at the inquest that there had been a
case of death following chiropractic manipulation the year before in
Toronto. Furthermore, the jury pointed out that one reason we don't know
the true incidence is that there is inadequate research to gather the
numbers.
A second inaccuracy is that physicians are told that the cause of death was
a tear in the vertebral artery, In fact, the coroner's jury in Saskatoon
stated that the cause of death was "traumatic rupture of the left vertebral
artery."
In my opinion, this shift in the language of the description of injury
minimizes the impression of what really happened in Laurie's death. It is
in keeping with other statements which I believe mislead readers,
For example, the Canadian Chiropractic Association has provided a release
which says, in part, "the jury did not make a finding that chiropractic
treatment was the cause of this tragedy." Indeed, the jury accurately put
the cause of death as a "traumatic rupture."
It is the courts which find fault, not a coroner's jury. But the fact
remains that after her last chiropractic manipulation, she suffered sudden
neck pain, and within minutes became unconscious, and within days was dead
from the effects of the traumatic rupture.
In the letter to Ontario physicians, the risk of chiropractic therapy is
belittled by comparing it with the risk from therapy with medications or
spinal surgery. It seems to me that the risk of chiropractic should be
explained on its own. For example, the risks of spinal surgery have little
to do comparatively with the risk of chiropractic manipulation, since
spinal surgery on the neck would not be used for a condition even remotely
similar to that for which chiropractic manipulation of the neck was used.
My daughter's death and subsequent events have led me to believe that
physicians may not be sufficiently aware of the fact that chiropractic
manipulation may cause the cervical vertebrae to strike the arteries and
result in a stroke whether or not there is a rupture. They may also be
unaware of how effective early recognition and anticoagulation therapy can
be, although it could not have helped my daughter.
Looking at the above facts, I would like to make two recommendations to the
physicians of Ontario, If these two recommendations became part of your
thinking, then my daughter's death would not be completely in vain.
First, I would like to have every doctor remember that "Every stroke which
is not otherwise specifically explained should automatically result in a
question as to whether the victim had chiropractic manipulations."
Only by being alert and aware can physicians have the opportunity to
intervene quickly enough to benefit the patient with anticoagulent therapy
and prevent further tragedy.
I know that from time to time physicians refer patients to chiropractors
for various back problems. When you do that as a physician, the patient
takes great stock of the fact that you have referred them to a
chiropractor, and willingly transfers their trust and confidence to that
practitioner. Although stroke is not frequent, nevertheless, the effect
upon an individual patient is catastrophic and therefore the risk must be
considered to be significant.
This brings me to my second recommendation: "When physicians refer patients
to a chiropractor for therapy they should inform patients that they should
be subjected to cervical manipulation there is a risk of a catastrophic
stroke."
As Laurie's mother, I have been distressed that the Ontario Chiropractic
Association would undertake a direct mailing to physicians without
contacting or consulting me and asking my permission to use her name.
I have no ability to match the resources required to do that, however, I am
grateful to the Ontario Medical Association for printing my letter to the
editor so that those doctors may receive this information.
At the same time, I hope to be of service to other patients and to
physicians through my recommendations, which I believe can serve the best
interests of the practice of medicine and the health of the people of
Ontario.
Sharon Mathiason
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
|