More on
The Lancet Whiplash Study
In the June issue, we reported
on the whiplash study conducted in Lithuania that concluded that chronic whiplash
was not real. Finally, the Letters to the Editor have been published,
and other criticisms have been raised.
One Norwegian professor
dismisses the patient selection methods as invalid, and lack of use of safety
belts (which have been found to increase the probability of whiplash injuries).
He concludes that the Lithuanian study, "...is interesting as a research idea,
but it should also be methodologically valid. The conclusions drawn from this
study can hardly be justified by the data. They remain personal, unproven beliefs."
Two Dutch scientists also
dismiss the selection methodology as flawed. They also questioned why there
was no data on traffic density, number of accidents, and the severity of the
injuries. They state that the Lithuania study researchers, "...justify the selection
of Lithuania as a study location by using the popular prejudice that the legal
system has in fact created this disability. In our opinion, unsafe traffic is
to blame, and sociocultural and legal circumstances encourage the submission
of insurance claims..."
Finally, Dr. Michael Freeman
and Dr. Arthur Croft wrote that, "Schrader and colleagues do not seem to have
studied late-whiplash syndrome. They investigated 202 Lithuanian individuals
who were involved in car accidents in which the police were summoned." They
make the excellent point that the study should have studied people who had suffered
a whiplash injury, not just people who had been in an accident.
"When the accident exposed
cohort was examined for those who had been exposed to acute whiplash, we found
that only 15% (31 of 202) gave any indication of neck pain after their accident."
Freeman and Croft then go on to reject all but two of the original group of
patients as invalid. "As a result, none of Schrader's conclusions about this
cohort relating to the natural progression of late whiplash are valid because
of severe and fatal selection bias."
Letters. The Lancet 1996;348:124-126.
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