Silverman was a passionate believer in the randomized clinical trial as the tool for questioning and improving the care of babies, which made him an unusual figure among doctors in the 1950s. Although researchers were convinced of the importance of evidence in determining best practice, the doctors on the ground still tended to be overconfident about their gut instincts. They had faith in their own sense of what the ideal conditions should be for helping premature babies, but according to Silverman this was a primitive way of deciding serious health issues:
Like the approach taken by farmers caring for newborn piglets, conditions considered ideal for survival were provided, and it was assumed that those who were ‘meant’ to survive would do so. But none of these purportedly ‘ideal conditions’ had ever been subjected to formal parallel-treatment trials…almost everything we were doing to care for premature infants was untested.
Doctors in the 1950s preferred to rely on what they had seen with their own eyes, and would typically respond to patients with the mantra ‘in my experience’. It did not seem to matter to doctors that their personal experience might be limited or misremembered, as opposed to the evidence from research trials, which would be extensive and meticulously documented. That is why Silverman was determined to instil a more systematic approach among his colleagues, and he was supported in his mission by his former tutor Richard Day:
Like Dick, I was completely sold on the numerical approach; soon we were making nuisances of ourselves by criticizing the subjective ‘in-my-experience’ reasoning of our co-workers…I was increasingly aware that the statistical approach was anathema to free-wheeling doctors who resented any doubts being expressed about the effectiveness of their untested treatments.
Half a century later, today’s doctors are much more accustomed to the concept of evidence-based medicine, and most accept that a well-designed randomized clinical trial is crucial for deciding what works and what does not. The purpose of this book has simply been to apply these same principles to alternative medicine. So what does evidence-based medicine say about chiropractic therapy?
Manipulating patients
When patients visit a chiropractor, they are usually suffering from back or neck pain. After taking a medical history, the chiropractor will embark on a thorough examination of the back, particularly the bones of the spine, called
The hallmark treatment of the chiropractor is a range of techniques known as