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Kids, Colic and Chiropractic
From the April 11, 2002 issues of CNN Interactive and
Web MD comes a story about children and colic. The story
has an unusual slant in that there are many medical
opinions that admit that the medical approach is
ineffective. These same medical opinions also admit that
the chiropractic approach did help infants with colic.
But the articles still fall short of endorsing
chiropractic care.
The article quotes Dr. Maxine McMullen, a chiropractor
in Davenport, Iowa, and president of the International
Chiropractic Association's Pediatric Council. In it she
states, "I've helped hundreds of babies with colic,
every one of them simply needed a spinal adjustment."
The article does report on a study that appeared in the
peer reviewed journal, the Journal of Manipulative and
Physiological Therapeutics. In the study twenty-five
randomly selected colicky infants received three to five
chiropractic adjustments over two weeks. By the end of
that period, diaries kept by parents showed that the
babies shortened their daily crying episodes by three
hours. In contrast, the crying of 20 infants taking
dimethicone decreased by only one hour. In a previous
study, published in the journal's August 1989 issue,
researchers tried the same technique on 316 colicky
babies and found that their crying soon diminished.
The article seems almost begrudging in their reporting
of the chiropractic success with infants with colic.
Several MDs still are skeptical of children receiving
chiropractic care. One section of the article tried to
explain the results by saying that infants with colic
may well be really suffering from back pain, and that
the chiropractic care helps the infants by helping the
back pain. Most chiropractors reject this concept and
attribute the improvement to a removal of interference
in the nervous system known as subluxation.
Despite the negative tone of the medical practitioners
interviewed in the article, none could dispute the fact
that medical care was generally ineffective while
chiropractic helped the infants.
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