Ok, you smart folks.
In the medical world, I know what M.D., R.N., and N.P. stand for. What is a D.O.?
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Ok, you smart folks.
In the medical world, I know what M.D., R.N., and N.P. stand for. What is a D.O.?
Doc of Osteopathy, apparently.
Maidengurl, I believe a D.O. is a Doctor of Osteopathy.
(ETA: Well, that seems to settle that....)
Lexine, osteopaths are licensed doctors. They can prescribe all the medicines and do surgery the same as MDs. Different philosophy. It is the accepted medical track in my family for some reason, so if anyone needs a good doctor in Waterville, ME...
eta: Woof, my typing is slow this a.m.
Osteopathy is what? I know, I could google. I will google.
Apparently my mom's attending doc is a D.O. She told him she wanted a second opinion, so he said something about getting the head of cardiovascular surgery to review her chart. Mom's response - "Oh, Chris? Sure, he is good." As I said, she knows enough key people that everyone else SHOULD be careful.
{{{Anne}}} I'm so sorry.
Osteopathy is what?
The opposite of allopathy. Allopathy treats a local disease locally, while osteopathy treats the whole body.
Osteopaths have generally been more accepting of alternative medicine and medical practices outside of the normal sphere of doctordom (chiropractic medicine, acupuncture), but they are real, licensed doctors with degrees from medical colleges of osteopathy.
How would I go about finding a local osteopath?
Strange that he seems to be treating the blood clot issue separately from her kidney failure/dialysis issues then.
Loves me some osteopaths. They can do spinal manipulations and such, but they don't have the weird reputation that chiropractors do. Mostly because they'll admit that there might be something wrong with you that's not related to your spine being out of whack.