So I'm doing acupuncture once a week and I find it to be less helpful than dry needing at the PT. Also, I'm doing turmeric & ginger gummies along with mint tea daily. Can't say it really helps but it's worth a shot. Thankfully I think I've made it through the worst of the pain. The deep disc pain has finally dissipated and things are much more manageable. Very scared to take painkillers for fear of addiction, however, I draw the line when I have pain that I can't sleep through. I can now understand long-term opioid use from a quality-of-life perspective. If I had to live in a 10/10 pain everyday iishhhh ya I'd be ok with being addicted.
Good acupuncture is an interesting beast. I've had both, good and bad. A good practitioner with a gentle needle technique will be pretty subtle as far as the effect goes and you really need to be in the mindset to do it, be patient and take on anything else the practitioner recommends as far as things you can do to help.
On the other hand, I've had acupuncture from a Kung Fu and Tai Chi Grandmaster. There was nothing subtle about his technique and it felt like I was being electrocuted at times! It did, however, really help my knee. I was recovering from surgery to clean up a torn Meniscus.
The Chiro thing is tricky. Spinal manipulation has been going on for a long time. It still has very widely held beliefs about efficacy.
In the Midwest, there is a Chiropractic School, Logan I think, that has a more gentle approach than just cracking your back. I'm not a medical professional by any stretch so won't put out any advice on which is better.
However, a severe injury and a smart Chiro I would hope results in a cautious and delicate approach. I have heard of, and know some folk with bad problems, who have been injured more by a Chiro who thinks they can cure the world.
Which gets to the point about Healers (not the mystical kind, but those who really are out to do good...): there is a trap that such practitioners fall into where they DO think they can heal everything and can easily do more harm than good.
It's a balance point and a risk.
I've had two Chiros out here that have injured me to some extent and I left them both very quickly as I started experiencing negative effects. One guy worked my back over so hard I could pop it for a week just by thinking it and I'm pretty certain he bruised the muscles around the adjustment spot he was forcing to get movement at.
The other guy was highly recommended but was really just an ambulance chaser. I went to him after being rear ended and having some whiplash. He kept adding in extra treatments and every time I had a session with him I would have these really gnarly deep headaches. That all stopped as soon as I stopped treatment from him.
I think that's when I ended up going to a guy who was the team Chiro for the SF Giants... he was good.
As before, there can be benefits for alternative care, but definitely not for everybody.