Acupuncture may cut time babies with colic spend crying

Acupuncture may reduce the amount of time colicky babies spend crying, a small study suggests.

Acupuncture may cut time babies with colic spend crying

Acupuncture may reduce the amount of time colicky babies spend crying, a small study suggests.

But one expert said the idea of "sticking needles" into a baby was "bizarre".

Researchers in Sweden set out to compare two different styles of acupuncture compared with no acupuncture.

The 144 babies with colic aged two to eight weeks who participated were split into three groups.

All babies were given usual care plus additional visits to public child health centres where they would receive additional advice and support, or "gold standard care".

Once at the centres, one group of babies received minimal acupuncture, another group received individual acupuncture inspired by Traditional Chinese Medicine and the last group had no acupuncture.

This happened twice weekly for a fortnight.

The parents of the babies involved were required to keep extensive diaries noting down the time and length babies cried.

The amount of time babies spent crying was reduced across all three groups, but the authors said this was to be expected as colic is a "spontaneously healing condition".

However, the researchers concluded that the two types of acupuncture were both superior to gold standard care alone.

By the second week, babies who were given acupuncture saw a greater reduction in the amount of time spent crying, the authors wrote in the journal Acupuncture In Medicine.

The authors noted that the babies "tolerated the treatment fairly well", adding that in 200 of 388 sessions, the babies did not cry at all.

But 8% of the treatments triggered crying that lasted longer than a minute, they said.

"The magnitude of the reduction in crying was greater, suggesting a faster recovery, in infants who received either type of acupuncture compared to gold standard care alone," they wrote.

Commenting on the study, David Colquhoun, professor of pharmacology at University College London, said: "Like most forms of alternative medicine, acupuncture has been advocated for a vast range of problems, and there is little evidence that it works for any of them.

"Colic has not been prominent in these claims.

"What parent would think that sticking needles into their baby would stop it crying? The idea sounds bizarre. It is.

"This paper certainly doesn't show that it works."

more courts articles

Man appears in court charged with false imprisonment of woman in van Man appears in court charged with false imprisonment of woman in van
Man in court over alleged false imprisonment of woman Man in court over alleged false imprisonment of woman
Coronation Street actor William Roache (91) given three months to settle tax debt Coronation Street actor William Roache (91) given three months to settle tax debt

More in this section

Mike Lynch court case Fallen tech star Mike Lynch painted as fraud mastermind in Hewlett-Packard trial
Fani Willis Trump seeks to appeal against decision not to disqualify DA in Georgia case
Ohio woman given life after child died when she left her alone to go on holiday Ohio woman given life after child died when she left her alone to go on holiday
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited