doi: 10.1111/jan.12360

Abstract

Aim

To evaluate and summarize the current evidence on the effectiveness of complementary and alternative medicine for the management of low back pain and/or pelvic pain in pregnancy.

Background

International research demonstrates that 25–30% of women use complementary and alternative medicine to manage low back and pelvic pain in pregnancy without robust evidence demonstrating its effectiveness.

Design

A systematic review of randomized controlled trials to determine the effectiveness of complementary and alternative medicine for low back and/or pelvic pain in pregnancy.

Data sources

Cochrane library (1898–2013), PubMed (1996–2013), MEDLINE (1946–2013), AMED (1985–2013), Embase (1974–2013), Cinahl (1937–2013), Index to Thesis (1716–2013) and Ethos (1914–2013).

Review methods

Selected studies were written in English, randomized controlled trials, a group 1 or 2 therapy and reported pain reduction as an outcome measure. Study quality was reviewed using Risk of Bias and evidence strength the Cochrane Grading of Recommendations and Development Evaluation Tool.

Results

Eight studies were selected for full review. Two acupuncture studies with low risk of bias showed both clinically important changes and statistically significant results. There was evidence of effectiveness for osteopathy and chiropractic. However, osteopathy and chiropractic studies scored high for risk of bias. Strength of the evidence across studies was very low.

Conclusion

There is limited evidence supporting the use of general CAM for managing pregnancy-related low back and/or pelvic pain. However, the restricted availability of high-quality studies, combined with the very low evidence strength, makes it impossible to make evidence-based recommendations for practice.

Full text available here.

News

  • We want to thank you for being a part of our journey this year. May your holidays be filled with peace, laughter, and cherished moments with loved ones. Here’s to a bright and beautiful season, and an even more wonderful year ahead!

Open Forum 2026

The topic of the 10th “Open Forum for Osteopathic Education” conference is "Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Osteopathy: opportunities & threats"

5th & 6th November 2026
Location: tbd

Become a member

OsEAN accepts memberships from educational structures which provide education and training in the osteopathic field. Individuals, however, cannot become members of OsEAN.
Application process
Benefits

VISD 2025

The idea for the Virtual International Student Day was born during the beginning of the pandemic. Meanwhile we are organising the 5th VISD with topic "Osteopathic identities in a changing world: Identity"

9th February 2025
Read more...

Member News

College Sutherland “Osteopathy in the visceral field”
In 2025, the CS (College Sutherland Amsterdam) will start a new course in the visceral field...

WSO presents “Paediatrics on demand” course
In March 2024 WSO will launch “Paediatrics on demand” as a full video course also in English...

PGCert in Osteopathic Education

Our part-time PGCert Teacher Training Course for Osteopaths is designed to equip current and aspiring educators with essential educational skills and tools. This comprehensive program covers
Read more...

Audits

This certification scheme specifies the procedure to evaluate and certify whether an osteopathic education provider meets the OsEAN "Standard for the Management of Osteopathic Educational Providers".
Read more...

Students Exchange

OsEAN Students Exchange program allows students of the OsEAN member schools to spend up to 7 days at any other school which is part of the program, attending courses and/or a teaching clinic.
Read more...