I beg to differ. A real test for Crohn's should take years. Both Crohn's and colitis are intermittent. Two of my grandchildren are afflicted, and my mother died of it (colitis), so I have some basis for my argument.
My granddaughter has colitis which seems to be under control using Anatabloc for almost two years. Yet, about a month ago, when under stress, she had a flare-up. My grandson who had both colitis (until his colon was removed) and Crohn's has similar experience. He commented to me the other day that he's been doing much better since I finally convinced him to start taking Anatabloc, but he still had a flare-up a couple of weeks ago.
So. The question is, "How do you define success?" Since my granddaughter might go for months with no problems before taking any medications, how do you know your new drug is doing anything? In addition, a bad choice of food coupled with a stressful situation might cause a flare-up months or even years into the trial.
My experience tells me that it definitely helps, but I think quantifying the level would be very difficult. I don't think you could ever claim a cure. Using statistics, you could show improvement, but I can use statistics to prove that children with larger feet do better on IQ tests too.
Dino