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[copied & pasted claim]
| Study | Summary | Conclusion |
| 1. Klougart N, Nilsson N and Jacobsen J (1989) Infantile Colic Treated by Chiropractors: A Prospective Study of 316 Cases, J Manip Physiol Ther,12:281-288. |
This study tracked 316 children with symptoms of colic during chiropractic treatment and showed that there was improvement in 94% of cases. However, this study failed to provide any evidence for or against the efficacy of chiropractic in the treatment of colic for the following reason: all children with colic improve over time. If all children improve from colic anyway, then showing that they improve after a certain treatment is unhelpful unless there is a control group not receiving treatment with which to compare them. This study contained no such group. |
This is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because it cannot demonstrate that treatment improves recovery from the condition. |
| 2. Mercer, C. and Nook, B. in the Proceedings of the 5th Biennial Congress of the World Federation of Chiropractic (1999) | This doesn't seem to have been published, so was not peer reviewed. As it seems to be almost impossible to get hold of the paper, there is very little that can be said. From the summary provided by the BCA, however, it appears that this was a simple observational study like the one above with no control group. |
This is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because it cannot demonstrate that treatment improves recovery from the condition. |
| 3. Wiberg J, Nordsteen J, Nilsson N. The short term effect of spinal manipulation in the treatment of infantile colic. A randomised controlled trial with a blinded observer. J Manipulative Physiol Ther (1999) 22:517-522. | This study was a randomised controlled trial comparing chiropractic with dimethicone in the treatment of colic. Without blinding between the two groups, it is likely that the placebo effect could play a major part in the outcome. The placebo effect is likely to be more pronounced with the chiropractic treatment as it is a more dramatic intervention. In addition, the system of measurement (asking parents to record crying hours) adds another potential bias. The parents who were keeping the diaries were were not blinded. Wiberg and Nilsson appear to concede this point themselves here: http://adc.bmj.com/cgi/eletters/84/2/138#124 |
This is inconclusive at best due to the lack of blinding, with the effects shown likely to be due to placebo and bias in record keeping. |
| 4. Hayden & Mullinger (2006) Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice (2006) 12, 83–90. |
This study did not investigate chiropractic, but cranial osteopathy. Even so, this was a preliminary trial. Preliminary trials are of too small a scale to reach a conclusion. They are used only to see if it might be worth performing a proper trial. |
This is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because it does not study chiropractic. |
| 5. Hipperson AJ (2004) Clinical Chiropractic 11, 122 – 129. | This was merely a report of two case studies. This is irrelevant for the same reason as Klougart N, Nilsson N and Jacobsen J, but with only two subjects. |
This is irrelevant.
It is irrelevant for the same reason as the first study. |
| 6. Browning M. Miller, J. Clinical Chiropractic (2008) 11, 122—129 | This study compared two different forms of chiropractic in the treatment of colic. Maybe they both work, maybe neither work. This study did not attempt to answer that question. |
This is irrelevant.
It is irrelevant because it did not test if the treatment worked. It merely compared two different types of chiropractic treatment. This outcome would be expected if neither method worked. |
| 7. Leach RA (2002) J Manip Physiol Ther, 25, 58 -62. | Simply another two case studies as Hipperson AJ (2004) above. |
This is irrelevant.
It is irrelevant for the same reason as the first study. |
| 8. Miller J (2007) Clinical Chiropractic 10, 139—146 Cry babies: A framework for chiropractic care. | This is not a study at all, we are not sure why it has been quoted by the BCA. | This is irrelevant, as it is not a study of any kind. |
| 9. Nilsson N. 1985 Eur J Chiropr 33, 264 – 255 Infantile colic and chiropractic. | This is merely a survey of parents who have had their child gone through chiropractic treatment for colic. No parents who did not take their children to chiropractors were questioned, making this study even more poorly designed than Klougart N, Nilsson N and Jacobsen J. |
This is irrelevant.
It is irrelevant for the same reason as the first study. |
| 10. Olafsdottir E, Forshei S, Fluge G, Markestad T (2001) Randomised controlled trial of infantile colic treated with chiropractic spinal manipulation. |
AIMS: To investigate the efficacy of chiropractic spinal manipulation in the management of infantile colic. METHODS: One hundred infants with typical colicky pain were recruited to a randomised, blinded, placebo controlled clinical trial. RESULTS: Nine infants were excluded because inclusion criteria were not met, and five dropped out, leaving 86 who completed the study. There was no significant effect of chiropractic spinal manipulation. Thirty two of 46 infants in the treatment group (69.9%), and 24 of 40 in the control group (60.0%), showed some degree of improvement. CONCLUSION: Chiropractic spinal manipulation is no more effective than placebo in the treatment of infantile colic. This study emphasises the need for placebo controlled and blinded studies when investigating alternative methods to treat unpredictable conditions such as infantile colic. This is the only properly conducted trial comparing chiropractic against placebo for the treatment of colic. The conclusion is that it simply does not work. |
This is highly relevant, and clearly shows that chiropractic spinal manipulation is no more effective than placebo in the treatment of infantile colic.
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