What Training Goes Into Chiropracty?

Chiropractic is not a field you can just walk into. Before our Edmonds chiropractic doctors could start working with the public, they had to go through years of schooling, practical training, and carefully regulated certification. Even compared to other medical professions, the requirements for becoming a doctor of chiropracty are quite stringent.

Before a prospective doctor can even apply to chiropractic college, he or she must have already completed at least three years of premedical study. They are required to take courses in biology, organic and inorganic chemistry, physics, and psychology, with all the relevant lab work. After they are accepted into a chiropractic program, the standards only get higher with four or five years of orthopedics, neurology, pathology, physiology, anatomy, microbiology, diagnosis, exercise, nutrition, and a whole lot more. They learn the principles of the field, gain practical training with patient care, and sometimes even undergo several years of residency. It’s only after graduating with the degree of doctor of chiropractic (DC) that they can finally take state license exams to earn the right to practice publically.

So don’t let anyone tell you that chiropracty isn’t legitimate medicine; these doctors are serious, scientifically-minded professionals who are easily the peers of the rest of the medical field.