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SUPPLY, DISTRIBUTION, AND
UTILIZATION OF CHIROPRACTORS IN THE UNITED STATES
A. Current and Projected
Supply of Chiropractors
In 1970, there were an estimated 13,000
chiropractors licensed in the United States (Cooper, 1996). This
number had increased to 40,000 in 1990 and to approximately 50,000
in 1994. Thus, there is roughly one chiropractor for every 5,000
U.S. residents. Estimates of the proportion of chiropractors who are
in full-time practice range from 82 percent in a large national
survey conducted in 1993 (Christensen) to 96 percent in a 1995
survey of members of the American Chiropractic Association (Goertz,
1996). Almost 90 percent of chiropractors report working at least 30
hours per week (Christensen, 1993) and the average chiropractor
claims to work about 42 hours per week (Goertz, 1996). Estimates of
the percentage of chiropractors in solo private practice range from
67 percent (Christensen, 1993) to 76 percent (Goertz, 1996),
indicating that most chiropractors have remained in solo practice.
In 1995, there were 14,040 students enrolled in
the 16 accredited chiropractic colleges, 2,864 of whom graduated in
that year.3 The enrollment patterns in chiropractic
colleges have been stable for the last several years with no new
colleges being established since 1994. It appears that enrollments
in chiropractic colleges are beginning to stabilize after a period
of growth. However, with about 2,900 graduates per year, an
increasing proportion of chiropractors is recent graduates.
A recent study estimated that the number of
chiropractors will double by the year 2010 (to over 100,000), far
exceeding the 16 percent increase projected for medical doctors
(Cooper, 1996). This projection is based on two assumptions: (1) the
number of chiropractor students will increase by 25 percent over the
next 5 years and then stabilize and (2) 27 percent of currently
active chiropractors will die or retire by 2010. Thus, it appears
that chiropractors will represent a substantially larger proportion
of health care professionals in the coming years.
B. Geographic Distribution
Colleges of chiropractic are not evenly
distributed throughout the United States. Of the 16 accredited
schools, 4 are in California, 2 in Texas, 2 in Missouri. The other
eight are distributed in Oregon, Minnesota, Illinois, New York
State, Georgia, Iowa, Connecticut, and South Carolina. Partly as a
result of the distribution of the colleges, the practitioners are
not evenly distributed throughout the states. Data from the
Federation of Chiropractic Licensing Boards (FCLB) on the number of
chiropractors licensed in each of the States in 1993 and 1995 (FCLB,
1996) are presented in Table IV-1. States with more than 3,000
chiropractors in 1995 were: California, New York, Florida,
Pennsylvania, and Texas. Twenty-two States had more than 1,000
chiropractors. California, with 9,879 licensed chiropractors, had
twice the number of the next largest state (New York).
The FCLB information, in conjunction with data on
the estimated population in each state during these years, permitted
estimation of the number of licensed chiropractors in each state per
100,000 population (Table 11). Because some chiropractors are
licensed in more than one state and a substantial fraction is not
practicing full-time (or at all), these numbers undoubtedly
overestimate the supply of chiropractors. In addition, the dramatic
differences in the reported number of chiropractors between 1993 and
1995 in some States (e.g., Hawaii, Illinois, New York, and
Pennsylvania) casts further doubt on the accuracy of these data.
Alternatively, changes in examination requirements, maintenance of
inactive vs. active licenses and examination and license fees may
account for year to year differences.
Nevertheless, the data are probably adequate for
identifying States or at least regions that have particularly high
or low population-to-chiropractor ratios. Specifically, States with
the fewest chiropractors per 100,000 population in 1995 were:
District of Columbia, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, and West
Virginia. The States with the most chiropractors per capita were:
Arizona, Colorado, and Hawaii. It appears that States in the West
have been generally more hospitable to chiropractors than those in
the South and East. About 60 percent of chiropractors worked in
urban or suburban communities, 35 percent in small towns, and 5
percent in rural areas (Goertz, 1996).
C. Utilization of
Chiropractic Services
The proportion of the United States population
that uses chiropractors and the number of chiropractic visits per
capita have about doubled in the past 15-20 years. A 1980 national
survey commissioned by the United States Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare reported that 3.6 percent of the population
used chiropractors that year and that there were 62 visits per 100
person-years (Von Kuster, 1980). The 1980 National Medical Care
Utilization and Expenditure Survey found that 4 percent of the
population saw a chiropractor (Mugge, 1984; Mugge, 1986). A
community-based study of claims data collected between 1974 and 1982
reported that there were 41 chiropractic visits per 100 person-years
(Shekelle, 1991). Each of the above studies also reported both
large-area and small-area geographic variations in chiropractic use.
More recently, a national telephone survey of the United States
adult population reported that 7 percent of persons had used a
chiropractor in the prior year (Eisenberg, 1993), and the
chiropractic visit rate, as calculated from a recent cluster sample
in 5 communities in the U.S., was 100 visits per 100 person-years
(Hurwitz, in press). In this study, there were only small (less than
10 percent) differences in the estimated use rates among sites (San
Diego, California; Portland, Oregon; Vancouver, Washington;
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota; Miami, Florida).
Table 11. Number of Licensed Chiropractors per 100,000
Population, by State: 1993 and 1995
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