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Chiropractors are not a usual source of primary health care

Chiropractors are the largest source of office-based care in the United States that does not involve a physician, but people do not view chiropractors as primary providers of health care or advice. Unlike the care given by primary care providers, the majority of care provided by chiropractors is limited to musculoskeletal problems. 

McCann J, Phillips RL, Green LA, and Fryer GE

The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality is generalizable to the United States. None of the 25,096 participants in the 2000 MEPS identified a chiropractor as their usual source of care, defined as a particular doctor's office, clinic, health center, or other place that the individual usually goes to if he/she is sick or needs health advice. Chiropractic visits comprised 6 percent of all office-based healthcare visits and nearly one in four visits to the offices of health professionals other than physicians. Chiropractors accounted for 14 percent of non-physician office-based expenditures, more than one third of which were paid out of pocket by patients. Only 9 percent of visits to chiropractors’ offices were referred by physicians.


*"Other" contains 254 conditions, most of which account for a fraction of a percent of chiropractic visits.

According to MEPS, most visits to chiropractors involved patients with musculoskeletal problems. This limited pattern of care contrasts with the much broader scope of primary care clinicians. This supports the recent decision by the Department of Veterans Affairs not to designate chiropractors as primary care providers.


McCann J, Phillips RL, Green LA, Fryer GE. Chiropractors are not a usual source of primary health care. Am Fam Physician. 2004 Jun 1;69(11):2544.

June 2004