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You’re exhausted. Your baby spits up after every feeding, arches their back in pain, and fights sleep because lying down makes it worse. You’ve tried elevating the crib, smaller feedings, and holding them upright for what feels like hours. Nothing’s working.
Here’s what changes when the reflux actually improves. Your baby starts keeping more food down, which means better weight gain and fewer worried looks from your pediatrician. Feeding becomes less of a battle and more of a bond. Sleep stretches get longer because your baby isn’t waking up choking or uncomfortable.
You get your confidence back as a parent. The constant worry about whether something’s seriously wrong starts to fade. You’re not just managing symptoms anymore—you’re watching your baby actually get better.
Most parents notice their baby crying less within the first few visits. Sleep improves next. Then feeding gets easier. The timeline varies, but the pattern holds: when you address what’s causing the reflux instead of just mopping up the mess, things actually change.
Dr. Paul Roses has been practicing in Bayonne since 1981, serving families throughout Hudson County including Washington Village. That’s over 30 years of adjusting babies—not as a side service, but as a core part of what we do.
He’s worked with infants in complex situations, including providing care at St. Clare’s Home for Children. He treated first responders after 9/11. This isn’t a practice that just added pediatric care to the menu last year.
Washington Village families deal with the same challenges as parents everywhere—pediatricians who say “wait it out,” medication options that feel too aggressive for a tiny body, and nights where you’d try anything to help your baby feel better. We understand that desperation, and we’ve helped hundreds of local families through it with a gentle, drug-free approach that actually addresses why the reflux is happening.
First, Dr. Roses examines your baby to understand what’s going on with their spine and nervous system. Birth—even uncomplicated birth—puts pressure on a baby’s neck and skull. That pressure can affect how their digestive system works.
The adjustment itself uses about as much pressure as you’d use to test a tomato for ripeness. It’s not the popping and cracking you might associate with adult chiropractic. Most babies sleep through it or just look around calmly. The goal is to remove interference in the nervous system so your baby’s body can regulate digestion properly.
You’ll typically start with visits twice a week. Most parents see improvement within four visits, though every baby responds differently. Some babies show changes immediately—they sleep better that same night. Others take a few weeks to really turn the corner.
We track progress with you at each visit. As things improve, visits spread out. The total timeline averages around three months for complete resolution, but you’re not locked into anything. You’ll know within the first few weeks whether this approach is working for your baby.
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This isn’t just about the two minutes your baby spends on the table. You get Dr. Roses’ experience with what actually works for infant reflux in Washington Village, NJ—feeding positions, timing strategies, and signs your baby has a nervous system imbalance that’s making things worse.
You also get honest answers about what chiropractic can and can’t do. If your baby needs medical intervention, we’ll tell you. If there are simple changes at home that could help alongside care, you’ll know about those too.
Many parents dealing with painful gas in newborns find that the same nerve interference causing reflux is also affecting how their baby’s digestive system moves gas through. Addressing one often helps the other. Same with sleep issues and feeding difficulties—they’re usually connected.
The Washington Village area has plenty of pediatricians, but most are trained to manage reflux with medication or the “wait and see” approach. You’re here because you want something different. What you get is a chiropractor for infant reflux in Washington Village, NJ who’s been doing this longer than most practices have existed, with a track record of babies who actually get better.
Most babies need between 8 and 12 visits total, spread over about three months. But you’ll know much sooner whether it’s working.
The typical pattern: visits start at twice per week for the first few weeks. Parents usually notice their baby crying less or sleeping slightly better within the first four visits. If you’re seeing zero change after four visits, that’s a conversation worth having about whether to continue.
As symptoms improve, visits spread to once a week, then every other week, then monthly check-ins. The goal isn’t to keep you coming forever—it’s to resolve the reflux and get you back to just being parents instead of reflux managers. Some babies need fewer visits, some need more. It depends on how severe the reflux is and how much nerve interference is present.
It looks nothing like an adult adjustment. Dr. Roses uses fingertip pressure—about the amount you’d use to check if fruit is ripe. There’s no twisting, no popping, nothing that would startle your baby.
Most of the adjustment focuses on the upper neck and base of the skull, where birth trauma typically causes the most interference. Your baby might be lying on a special padded table or in your arms, depending on what keeps them calmest. The actual adjustment takes just a few minutes.
Many babies fall asleep during or right after. Some don’t even notice anything happened. A few fuss briefly, but that’s usually because they don’t like being held still, not because anything hurts. You’re in the room the entire time, and you can stop things at any moment if you’re uncomfortable. The whole visit, including exam and adjustment, typically runs about 15-20 minutes.
Research shows no serious adverse effects from chiropractic treatment in infants when performed by someone trained in pediatric techniques. The pressure used is gentle enough that there’s no risk of injury to your baby’s developing spine.
Dr. Roses has over 30 years of experience adjusting babies, including medically fragile infants. He knows the difference between normal infant fussiness and a sign that something’s wrong. He also knows when a baby needs medical care instead of or alongside chiropractic.
The bigger safety question most parents should ask: what are the risks of doing nothing? Ongoing reflux can lead to poor weight gain, feeding aversions, and sleep deprivation for the whole family. Medications commonly prescribed for infant reflux have been shown in studies to be ineffective for babies and potentially carry long-term risks. A gentle, drug-free approach that addresses the root cause is often the safest path forward when it’s done by someone who actually knows infant anatomy.
Beyond the obvious spitting up, look for patterns. Does your baby arch their back during or after feeding? That’s often a sign they’re trying to relieve pressure in their digestive system. Do they only sleep well when held upright? That suggests lying flat triggers discomfort that’s nerve-related.
Frequent hiccups, difficulty latching or staying latched during breastfeeding, and preferring to turn their head to only one side are all signs of potential nerve interference. So is excessive gas that seems painful—not just normal baby toots, but gas that makes them pull their legs up and cry.
Many babies with reflux also have trouble settling down even when they’re clearly exhausted. Their nervous system is stuck in a stressed state, which affects digestion and sleep. If your baby startles easily, fights sleep hard, or seems uncomfortable no matter what position you try, there’s likely a nervous system component to what’s going on. That’s exactly what chiropractic care addresses—removing the interference so your baby’s body can function the way it’s supposed to.
If your baby spits up after every feeding in Washington Village, NJ, chiropractic care addresses why that’s happening instead of just trying to reduce the volume. The question is whether nerve interference is preventing your baby’s digestive system from working properly.
Most babies who spit up constantly have some degree of upper cervical misalignment affecting the nerves that control the valve between the esophagus and stomach. When those nerves aren’t functioning right, that valve doesn’t close properly. Food comes back up. Adjusting the misalignment often improves valve function.
You should see some change in frequency or volume within the first few weeks if this is going to work for your baby. Not every baby responds—some have structural issues that need medical intervention, and some have reflux that’s purely developmental and will resolve with time regardless of treatment. But research shows about 9 out of 10 infants improve with chiropractic care for reflux. Those are odds worth exploring before committing to months of medication or just suffering through it.
Yes, because infant reflux rarely shows up alone. The same nerve interference causing reflux usually affects other things—colic, sleep problems, feeding difficulties, and painful gas in newborns all tend to cluster together.
We treat the whole baby, not just the symptom that brought you in. Many parents come in desperate about the reflux and leave equally grateful that their baby finally sleeps or that breastfeeding suddenly got easier. It’s all connected through the nervous system.
Beyond infancy, we treat children and adults for everything from ear infections to sports injuries to chronic pain. But infant care isn’t something we do on the side—it’s a core part of our practice and has been for three decades. You’re not bringing your baby to someone who mostly treats back pain and occasionally sees kids. You’re bringing them to a practice that’s been adjusting babies since before most of the pediatricians in Washington Village, NJ were even born.