Claims chiropractors can treat ADHD, allergies 'misleading' customers

Mark Hanna and I wrote a letter to the New Zealand Medical Journal about research we had completed showing that the majority of chiropractors break the Chiropractic Board policy on advertising. The policy states:

"All advertising must... be presented in a manner that is accurate, balanced, and not misleading;"

and

"A chiropractor shall not advertise... if the material... uses testimonials whether from patients or any other person"

54% of the websites claim that at least one of ADHD, Allergies, Asthma, Bed Wetting, Colic or Ear Infections could be treated or improved by chiropractic manipulation, and 35% of the websites contained testimonials.

When asked about these claims, the Chiropractic Association said that these issues had been addressed, saying that the research was "not really current now". However, I re-checked all the websites we visited and found that:

4 had stopped making the claims we looked for

4 had closed their websites, and possibly gone out of business

2 had claims that we had missed on the previous check

5 had added claims since our last check

The Chiropractic Board has reminded chiropractors to not make misleading claims:

http://www.chiropracticboard.org.nz/Portals/12/Board%20News%20April%202016.pdf