When I tell people I'm studying to become an osteopath they usually look slightly puzzled before asking me is that like a chiropractor. It seems to me the chiropractic profession is streets ahead of osteopathy in terms of mass-conscious awareness of their profession - although I am open to the possibility that I just hang around the wrong people.
Why is it that people seem reasonably aware of chiropractors but osteopaths remain comparatively obscure? I'm fairly sure the answer is not "infamy" :)
Both professions have been around for a similar length of time. The chiropractic profession was founded in 1895 and osteopathy in 1874. In the UK, both gained statutory regulation at the same time. The latest figures* from our respective governing bodies indicate there are 3,739 registered osteopaths to 2,349 registered chiropractors. However 240 new chiropractors joined their profession that year compared to a mere 120 osteopaths.
You would think that given there are more qualified osteopaths in the country, osteopathy would have a higher profile.
Are chiropractors just better at selling themselves? Ideas.. thoughts?
* Source:
GSS-CC annual report 2004/2005 (latest on their website)
GSOC annual report 2006 (latest on their website)
Tags: chiropractors, gsoc, statistics
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