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Don't trust the headlineLast week The Guardian (hardly the UK's most sensationalist newspaper) ran a couple of articles
here and here based on this paper Analgesic effects of non-surgical and non-interventional treatments for low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of placebo-controlled randomised trials Here's a link, click on the PDF symbol to download The Guardian take-home, and indeed the headline of one of the articles is 'only 10% of non-surgical interventions provide pain-relief', but is this what the research paper says? Spoiler, no it doesn't The paper is a systematic review of randomised controlled trials comparing individual treatments with a sham or placebo (a sham treatment is not quite the same as a placebo but the idea is that it mimics the treatment being tested but tries to exclude the supposed active element). The group had previously undertaken this activity in 2008 and this was an update so the paper aimed to find and add all of the published research since 2008 that met its inclusion and quality criteria. Papers that didn't quite meet the gold standard would be included but marked down. Providing sham treatments for manual therapies is difficult and double blinding (ensuring that neither the practitioner nor patient know whether they are in the active or sham group) is very difficult and so out of the c6500 new studies since this group's previous version of this paper only c170 met the grade for inclusion These papers tended to cluster around interventions for which a sham or placebo can more easily be contrived such as analgesic drugs and meridian point acupuncture There was enough evidence to say that 5 interventions were likely beneficial (they include spinal manipulation and massage) And so, despite 16 years having elapsed since the last systematic review , actually the take home was that there was still not enough evidence to say how effective most interventions were
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March 2025
AuthorDamian is the principal osteopath at Vauxhall Village Osteopathy and Oval Osteopathy Categories
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