Lore
100 Days of Evidence for Chiropractic
Jason's ongoing social media series posting peer-reviewed research on chiropractic — a project born partly from the podcast's focus on evidence-based practice and partly from wanting a clean answer ready for the haters.
“100 Days of Evidence for Chiropractic” is Jason’s social media series posting studies supporting chiropractic care. It grew directly from the podcast’s evidence-based ethos and from the reality that chiropractic faces disproportionate online skepticism — some warranted, some reflexive.
Jason has described the series as useful not just for public education but for himself: going through the literature keeps his practice sharp. He also appreciated the moment when one particularly aggressive commenter accused him of not understanding scientific method, only for Jason to point out that the study he was presenting was authored entirely by physical therapists and PhDs — no chiropractors — and that the critic clearly hadn’t read the paper.
The series also came up in the BFR episode, where Jason mentioned running across the OUCH study (Outcomes in Usual Chiropractic) while researching. He was delighted that scientists had named a study OUCH and wished he had glasses to push up his nose about it.
First seen in Is Chiropractic a Dangerous Pseudoscientific Scam? (Evidence Review).