Lmanndc
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Case study as source on Ankylosing Spondylitis
editThanks for contacting me on my talk page. While I agreed with your removal of the poorly sourced material, your addition to the article gave undue weight to a primary case study in a way that seems a bit promotional. The crux if the issue is WP:MEDRS, especially WP:MEDSCI. Primary studies should never be used to draw medical conclusions. Case studies, especially case studies involving a single individual, are rarely worth mentioning in any context.
Assuming by your username that you might be a chiropractor, you might want to familiarize yourself with the Chiropractic article and the ongoing disputes there on how to best present chiropractic practice within Wikipedia. --Ronz (talk) 17:44, 22 February 2012 (UTC)
Ronz
First, my assumption is that Wikipedia is for the benefit of mankind; therefore many of the people looking at this article are affected by AS and are looking for help/knowledge.
It is virtually impossible to perform a double blinded study on any of the physical healing arts; and all of Chiropractic's research budget worldwide isn't even a drop in the bucket of even a single drug research.
Is Chiropractic being held to a higher standard?
By your criteria, I will be removing the following from the AS article as none of it has any resources.
Ronz First, my assumption is that Wikipedia is for the benefit of mankind; therefore many of the people looking at this article are affected by AS and are looking for help/knowledge. It is virtually impossible to perform a double blinded study on any of the physical healing arts; and all of Chiropractic's research budget worldwide isn't even a drop in the bucket of even a single drug research. Is Chiropractic being held to a higher standard? By your criteria, I will be removing the following from the AS article as none of it has any resources.
Physical therapy
editSome of the therapies that have been shown to benefit AS patients include:
- Physical therapy/osteopathy/physiotherapy, shown to be of great benefit to AS patients;
- Swimming, one of the preferred exercises since it involves all muscles and joints in a low-impact, buoyant environment;
- Slow movement muscle extending exercises like stretching, yoga, climbing, t'ai chi, Pilates method, etc.
Moderate-to-high impact exercises like jogging are generally not recommended or recommended with restrictions due to the jarring of affected vertebrae that can worsen pain and stiffness in some patients.
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In all due respect and seriousness though, does removing this make this Wikipedia page better for the person seeking help???
Lmanndc (talk) 04:00, 25 February 2012 (UTC) Thanks Larry
Ronz I'm not sure I'm entering correctly on this talk page; please let me know if not. The following is from Wikipedia: "Ideal sources for biomedical material include general or systematic reviews in reliable, third-party, published sources, such as reputable medical journals, widely recognised standard textbooks written by experts in a field, or medical guidelines and position statements from nationally or internationally recognised expert bodies."
What part of the above did my references not meet? Larry Lmanndc (talk) 04:06, 25 February 2012 (UTC)