Low Back Surgery – Money For the Surgeon Or Help For the Patient?
Michael W. Page, D.C. | January 22, 2010Years ago, I was an insurance adjuster. I handled claims for large farm labor companies in California and I was the worker’s compensation adjuster. When people were injured, they heard from me. I learned what happened and I paid them their disability benefits and also paid for all of their medical bills. I estimate that over the 3 1/2 years that I adjusted claims, I paid for at least 150 lower back disc surgeries. The average cost of these surgeries was $60,000. I would routinely authorize $10,000-$12,000 bills to be paid directly to the main surgeon. Some of these surgeries would last 3-4 hours and sometimes up to 8-10 hours. I had one surgeon who used to do 2 surgeries per day.
In order to perform 2 surgeries per day, office staff including nurse practitioners and physician assistants are the ones who see the patients before and after surgery. This kind of impersonal service is what is required to make $20,000 per day. At that rate, is the focus on the patient or finances of the office and surgeon?
Seeing dozens of patients with almost identical symptoms can lead a doctor who treat most of them quite similarly. Even though the surgeon has the best intentions, at the end of the day, most patients are treated similarly and often not given the individual attention they deserve. Attention must be paid to side effects, possible problems, and alternatives to such a drastic procedure as surgery.
As a result of seeing this kind of health care, I quite my job and went back to school to become a chiropractor with the aim and goal of helping people to avoid the disabling effects of failed lower back surgeries. Many never recover as promised and others are worse. Fortunately, there are a small minority who praise the surgery and report life-changing improvement. If only those numbers were higher. Unfortunately, well over 50% of all back surgeries end up as failed and lead to further problems.
A neurosurgeon once told me when I was an adjuster, that there is no such thing as a one-time surgery. All backs that undergo surgery will need further and additional surgery in the future as the operated zone of the spine becomes weakened and other areas around it are damaged over time. Thus, by doing one surgery, the surgeon is ensuring his future surgeries as most people go to the same surgeon again since the surgeon “knows my back.”
Over the past 10 years, I have helped literally hundreds avoid surgery, get out of pain, and heal their lower back pain and lumbar disc problems. Even if patients have been recommended for surgery, the majority have no fully tried alternative therapies like chiropractic to help them. Chiropractic and physical therapy can help the disc heal and if a herniation has occurred, even help it to heal and get the patient back to normal life.
The research and medical community knows that starting with the least invasive therapy first makes sense. It’s cost effective, has less side effects, and respects the best wishes of the patient. Chiropractic is gentle and has virtually no possible side effects in these types of cases.
Unfortunately, when you can make $20,000 per day the best interest of the patient and their health becomes blurred.
Discover how to avoid back surgery through natural means and avoid failed low back syndrome and catastrophic problems associated with surgery. If you’d like to learn more about how to avoid back surgery visit our website.














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