Dynamic Chiropractic

The 7-Point Office Visit

6 min · 1. kesä 2026
jakson The 7-Point Office Visit kansikuva

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To improve efficiency, safety, and patient engagement, this article advocates for a systematic, 7-point checklist for daily patient visits. Drawing parallels to checklists in other industries, the author details a structured approach to each encounter. The seven points are: 1) Assess Pain using standardized tools like the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) and the PEG scale. 2) Evaluate Improvement by asking about 12 primary indicators, including sleep quality and return to daily activities. 3) Inquire about Concurrent Care the patient may be receiving from other providers. 4) Outline the Plan to reinforce treatment goals and the visit schedule. 5) Check on Exercise, both prescribed and recreational, to ensure compliance and prevent harm. 6) Answer Any Questions, directly addressing a common patient complaint and demonstrating that the provider is listening. 7) Survey Satisfaction With Care to gather valuable feedback and strengthen the doctor-patient relationship. While this process may seem time-consuming, the author notes that not all points need extensive review at every visit. Implementing this checklist can streamline office flow, prevent critical omissions, and ultimately enhance the quality and effectiveness of care by ensuring a comprehensive and patient-centered approach.

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jakson From Classroom to Clinic: How Early Exposure to Patients Is Shaping Future DCs kansikuva

From Classroom to Clinic: How Early Exposure to Patients Is Shaping Future DCs

This article describes a transformative approach to chiropractic education at the University of Pittsburgh, where students are immersed in clinical environments from their very first week. This model starkly contrasts with traditional programs that sequester students in labs and libraries for years before any patient contact. By participating in rotations through chiropractic offices, physical therapy clinics, and even high-stakes settings like emergency departments and ambulance ride-alongs, students gain profound, early insights. This exposure shifts their focus from rote memorization of sciences to the practical application of clinical skills like patient communication, humility, and composure under pressure. Witnessing experienced mentors handle real-world crises helps build a level of confidence and professionalism that typically takes years to develop post-graduation. The experience also provides context, making subjects like biochemistry feel like a "survival guide" rather than an abstract requirement. This continuous thread of hands-on learning helps students understand their unique role within the broader healthcare system and fosters a collaborative mindset. The author argues that this model is not just producing graduates but shaping competent, confident, and professional future doctors who are better prepared for the realities of clinical practice.

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jakson The 7-Point Office Visit kansikuva

The 7-Point Office Visit

To improve efficiency, safety, and patient engagement, this article advocates for a systematic, 7-point checklist for daily patient visits. Drawing parallels to checklists in other industries, the author details a structured approach to each encounter. The seven points are: 1) Assess Pain using standardized tools like the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) and the PEG scale. 2) Evaluate Improvement by asking about 12 primary indicators, including sleep quality and return to daily activities. 3) Inquire about Concurrent Care the patient may be receiving from other providers. 4) Outline the Plan to reinforce treatment goals and the visit schedule. 5) Check on Exercise, both prescribed and recreational, to ensure compliance and prevent harm. 6) Answer Any Questions, directly addressing a common patient complaint and demonstrating that the provider is listening. 7) Survey Satisfaction With Care to gather valuable feedback and strengthen the doctor-patient relationship. While this process may seem time-consuming, the author notes that not all points need extensive review at every visit. Implementing this checklist can streamline office flow, prevent critical omissions, and ultimately enhance the quality and effectiveness of care by ensuring a comprehensive and patient-centered approach.

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This article sounds an alarm about the calculated and sophisticated assault on independent chiropractic by corporate medicine. Driven by a relentless focus on return on investment (ROI), large healthcare corporations are acquiring chiropractic practices to use them as referral gateways for more profitable services like pain management and surgery. They lure chiropractors with high salaries and promises of future equity that rarely materialize, effectively turning practice owners into low-level associates with no control over patient care. These corporate systems limit chiropractic treatment to insurer-approved visit caps, prematurely ending care plans to funnel patients down the revenue-optimized pathway. A key competitive advantage for these corporations is their advanced information systems. Their medical EHR platforms are integrated business engines with automated referral, marketing, and reputation management capabilities, putting them 8-10 years ahead of the legacy software common in chiropractic. This technology allows them to systematically capture referrals at a scale independent practices cannot match. The author warns that this well-funded, data-driven strategy is designed to seize chiropractic's patients and revenue, fundamentally threatening the autonomy and patient-centered model of the independent chiropractor.

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Severe Post-MVA Injuries That Can Be Challenging to Diagnose (Pt. 4)

This article focuses on the clinical progression from post-concussion syndrome (PCS) to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following a motor-vehicle accident (MVA). It explains that PCS, a form of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), can result from blunt-force trauma or acceleration-deceleration forces causing diffuse axonal injury, often without visible head trauma. PCS is diagnosed when concussion symptoms like headache, dizziness, and fatigue persist beyond two weeks, potentially accompanied by issues like photophobia, memory impairment, and irritability. The author emphasizes the significant symptom overlap between PCS and PTSD, including hyperarousal, sleep disturbances, and poor concentration, noting that the two conditions can co-occur and exacerbate one another. The prolonged recovery from physical MVA injuries can reinforce the "trauma memory" that contributes to PTSD. To aid in diagnosis and documentation, the article recommends clinical tools like the Acute Concussion Evaluation (ACE) and post-concussion questionnaires. It concludes by stressing the need for early identification and interprofessional co-management with neurologists and psychotherapists to address both the physical and psychosocial aspects of the patient's recovery, which is critical for achieving an effective outcome.

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