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Re-Evaluations
After re-evaluating your condition, your doctor of chiropractic will make specific recommendations as to your future care.
Such recommendations will be based upon the objective physical findings noted in the re-evaluation, as well as your doctor's
past experience with similar cases. Oftentimes - but not necessarily - your doctor may elect to change or alter your treatment
program to fit the progress that you are making. Your doctor may decide to change the interval or frequency of your office
visits according to your progress. Or, your doctor may decide to start using a different technique that is more suitable for
your changing condition. Also, your doctor may counsel you on other treatment procedures, such as good dietary habits, exercises
or spinal rehabilitation.
Regularly scheduled re-evaluations help your doctor to keep up-to-date on your condition and increase the effectiveness
of your treatment program. Your part in the re-evaluation process is to notify the doctor of any and all changes that you
may be experiencing throughout your treatment program. This information is helpful, along with the results of the re-evaluations,
in formulating your doctor's decision on your future care.
Understanding your health problem is crucial to the overall success of your treatment program. Ask questions as often as
you would like until you feel confident about your treatment program and the progress you are making. Following your doctor's
recommendations is certainly vital to your overall success.
Only through these re-evaluation procedures, and keeping the lines of communication open with your doctor, will your current
state of health be known.
our original treatment program was based upon the diagnostic findings and case history that were presented on your first
visit. According to those findings, your doctor of chiropractic set up a treatment program tailored to your needs. During
the course of your treatment program you will most likely be scheduled for a reevaluation. At that time, your doctor of chiropractic
will evaluate the progress that is being made and either continue, intensify or reduce your present health care program, or
possibly make special specific recommendations on your future care.
Since patients tend to concern themselves only with the symptoms of their disease, they might believe that if they are
feeling better, the problem must be gone. That's usually not true. The same diagnostic procedures that were performed initially
will most likely need to be repeated to determine what type of real (objective) changes are taking place. Pain is not the
best indicator of the progress you are making, since the nature of pain is such that it comes and goes. Pain is also usually
the last thing to appear in a poor health condition and generally the first thing to disappear as health care begins.
If you are presently pain-free, or experiencing relief, it does not mean the problem has been corrected. Only through objective
physical findings, like those evidenced by your re-evaluation results, can your progress be accurately gauged. This is why
reevaluations are such an important part of your health care program. Your treatment program was designed to do more than
simply get you out of pain. It was designed to strengthen, stabilize, and possibly even correct the underlying problem.
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