Spinal Chat with The PCA

PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss

22 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss

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PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss In this PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight, Mike Barba of the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association interviews Ryan Moss, Senior Director of Enterprise Sales at North, a payment processing company vetted by PCA to help chiropractors understand and reduce credit card processing costs. North, in payment processing since 1992, specializes in medical merchants, owns its in-house processing platform, and emphasizes dedicated service, integrations with practice management software, and a user-friendly portal for statements, deposits, and transaction visibility. The discussion highlights how hidden “junk fees,” padded interchange, and unclear statements can drive effective rates to 4–5%, while understanding total fees divided by monthly volume helps identify overpaying; North aims for transparent pricing and offers options including traditional pricing and a dual pricing “Edge” program that can pass acceptance costs to patients. Members are encouraged to review agreements, watch for long-term contracts and cancellation fees, and contact Moss for statement-based comparisons; using PCA partners also supports PCA advocacy and education, with a portion of transactions benefiting the association. 00:00 Member Spotlight Intro 00:57 Meet Mike and North 02:09 What North Does 03:11 Why Switch Processors 04:33 Technology and Service 05:49 Hidden Fees Explained 07:18 Reading Your Statement 10:15 Payment Options for Clinics 11:19 Training and Support 12:47 Comparing Providers 15:23 Contracts to Avoid 17:18 How to Get Started 18:21 Partnering Supports PCA 18:54 Final Pitch and Wrap 21:15 Key Takeaways Outro Contact North, Ryan Moss Senior Director, Enterprise Sales P: 818-825-7500 E: ryan.moss@north.com [ryan.moss@north.com] PCA Website: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] PCA Email: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org] Created and produced by Mike Barba for the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association. AI-assisted tools were used in the production of this content. Final content was reviewed and approved by PCA.

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episode PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss artwork

PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss

PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight: North Payment Processing with Ryan Moss In this PCA Strategic Business Member Spotlight, Mike Barba of the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association interviews Ryan Moss, Senior Director of Enterprise Sales at North, a payment processing company vetted by PCA to help chiropractors understand and reduce credit card processing costs. North, in payment processing since 1992, specializes in medical merchants, owns its in-house processing platform, and emphasizes dedicated service, integrations with practice management software, and a user-friendly portal for statements, deposits, and transaction visibility. The discussion highlights how hidden “junk fees,” padded interchange, and unclear statements can drive effective rates to 4–5%, while understanding total fees divided by monthly volume helps identify overpaying; North aims for transparent pricing and offers options including traditional pricing and a dual pricing “Edge” program that can pass acceptance costs to patients. Members are encouraged to review agreements, watch for long-term contracts and cancellation fees, and contact Moss for statement-based comparisons; using PCA partners also supports PCA advocacy and education, with a portion of transactions benefiting the association. 00:00 Member Spotlight Intro 00:57 Meet Mike and North 02:09 What North Does 03:11 Why Switch Processors 04:33 Technology and Service 05:49 Hidden Fees Explained 07:18 Reading Your Statement 10:15 Payment Options for Clinics 11:19 Training and Support 12:47 Comparing Providers 15:23 Contracts to Avoid 17:18 How to Get Started 18:21 Partnering Supports PCA 18:54 Final Pitch and Wrap 21:15 Key Takeaways Outro Contact North, Ryan Moss Senior Director, Enterprise Sales P: 818-825-7500 E: ryan.moss@north.com [ryan.moss@north.com] PCA Website: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] PCA Email: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org] Created and produced by Mike Barba for the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association. AI-assisted tools were used in the production of this content. Final content was reviewed and approved by PCA.

2 de jun de 202622 min
episode PCA Study Review: Shoulder Pain, Rotator Cuff Tears, and the Problem with One Test Thinking artwork

PCA Study Review: Shoulder Pain, Rotator Cuff Tears, and the Problem with One Test Thinking

PCA Study Review: Shoulder Pain, Rotator Cuff Tears, and the Problem with One Test Thinking In this episode of PCA Study Review, a service of the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association, we review research on shoulder exams, rotator cuff tears, and subacromial impingement. Shoulder exams can get crowded quickly: Neer, Hawkins, Jobe, Drop Arm, Lift Off, Painful Arc, and lag signs. Most doctors know the names. The deeper issue is whether we understand what each test actually tells us. The literature reinforces one clear point: no single shoulder test is perfect. This review focuses on lag signs, particularly the External Rotation Lag Sign at 90 Degrees and the Internal Rotation Lag Sign, to identify full-thickness rotator cuff tears. The larger lesson is not that doctors need one magic test. Better clinical reasoning requires test clusters, context, documentation, and knowing when referral, imaging, or co-management may be appropriate. For chiropractors, this matters because musculoskeletal care depends on skilled examination early in the care pathway. The opportunity is to evaluate carefully, recognize red flags, document clearly, and treat conservatively when appropriate. In This Episode * Why one test thinking can weaken the shoulder diagnosis * Why lag signs deserve attention in shoulder evaluation * How high specificity and low sensitivity should affect interpretation * Why familiar tests are not always the strongest tests * How test clusters improve clinical reasoning * When shoulder findings may require referral, imaging, or co-management * Why evidence-informed documentation strengthens care and credibility Reference Articles Zhao, Q., Palani, P., Kassab, N. S., Terzic, M., Olejnik, M., Wang, S., Tomassini-Lopez, Y., Dean, C., & Shellenberger, R. A. Evidence-based approach to the shoulder examination for subacromial bursitis and rotator cuff tears: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 25, Article 1028, 2024. [https://bmcmusculoskeletdisord.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12891-024-08144-z] Hermans, J., Luime, J. J., Meuffels, D. E., Reijman, M., Simel, D. L., & Bierma-Zeinstra, S. M. A. Does This Patient With Shoulder Pain Have Rotator Cuff Disease? The Rational Clinical Examination Systematic Review. JAMA, 310(8), 837–847, 2013. [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/1733724] Castoldi, F., Blonna, D., & Hertel, R. External rotation lag sign revisited: Accuracy for diagnosis of full-thickness supraspinatus tear—Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, 18(4), 529–534, 2009. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1058274609000081] Miller, C. A., Forrester, G. A., & Lewis, J. S. The Validity of the Lag Signs in Diagnosing Full-Thickness Tears of the Rotator Cuff: A Preliminary Investigation. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 89(6), 1162–1168, 2008. [https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003999308002098] The shoulder is complex. Rotator cuff disease is common. Pain provocation tests can mislead when used carelessly. The opportunity is to read the research, revisit the exam, and sharpen the clinical reasoning that protects patients and strengthens the profession. PCA Website: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] PCA Email: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org]

27 de may de 20269 min
episode PCA Deep Dive: Pennsylvania’s Chiropractic Scope Fight; Modern Care vs. Outdated Laws artwork

PCA Deep Dive: Pennsylvania’s Chiropractic Scope Fight; Modern Care vs. Outdated Laws

PCA Deep Dive: Pennsylvania’s Chiropractic Scope Fight; Modern Care vs. Outdated Laws In this episode of PCA Deep Dive, we examine one of the most important questions facing chiropractic in Pennsylvania: What happens when modern chiropractic education, modern patient needs, and conservative care collide with an outdated scope-of-practice law built for another era? Pennsylvania’s chiropractic scope of practice is nearly 50 years old. While the profession, patient expectations, education standards, and healthcare delivery models have changed dramatically, Pennsylvania law has not kept pace. This episode explores the real-world impact of that mismatch, including restricted practice authority, rural access challenges, workforce pressure, delegation barriers, insurance friction, and the hidden cost of limiting conservative, non-pharmacological care. We also discuss research from West Virginia University showing that Pennsylvania ranks among the most restrictive states in the country for chiropractic scope of practice. The result is a paradox: highly trained doctors operating under low autonomy. But this is bigger than one bill. This is the scope fight. It is about whether Pennsylvania’s chiropractic law will finally reflect modern education, modern patient needs, and modern conservative care. In This Episode * Why Pennsylvania’s chiropractic scope of practice is nearly 50 years old * How outdated scope laws affect access, efficiency, and patient choice * Why does Pennsylvania rank among the most restrictive states for chiropractic scope * How regulatory ambiguity can function like a practical ban * Why rural communities feel these restrictions more sharply * How workforce shortages and limited training pipelines affect access * Why HB 1106 matters for delegation and clinic efficiency * How scope modernization connects to non-opioid care and the future of chiropractic in Pennsylvania Get Involved Policy does not change from the sidelines. PCA’s Lobby Day is June 9 in Harrisburg, and we need chiropractors from across Pennsylvania to show up, meet with elected officials, and help tell the story of this profession. We know it is a practice day. But this is one of the most important opportunities we have to show the strength, seriousness, and unity of chiropractic in Pennsylvania. If you cannot attend, please consider supporting the PCA PAC. One hundred percent of PCA PAC donations go directly toward supporting chiropractic advocacy and the future of the profession in Pennsylvania. WVU study on Pennsylvania’s outdated scope of practice: [https://knee.wvu.edu/publications/knee-center-research/2026/04/16/chiropractic-scope-of-practice-and-provider-distribution-in-pennsylvania] Register for PCA Lobby Day on June 9: [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf6J5wmpJiZI6xMTwu5i7kmgQauR0IUW32S6YcIu5LAQsfcNw/viewform] Support the PCA PAC: [https://pca.ce21.com/donations] Learn more about HB 1106 and delegation restoration: [https://pennchiro.org/hb1106/] PCA: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] Email the PCA: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org]

19 de may de 202624 min
episode PCA Study Spotlight: The Hidden Circuit of Chronic Pain artwork

PCA Study Spotlight: The Hidden Circuit of Chronic Pain

PCA Study Spotlight: The Hidden Circuit of Chronic Pain Stanford’s Hidden Chronic Pain Circuit: A Better Framework for Explaining Persistent Mechanical Pain This episode of PCA Study Spotlight reviews a Stanford Nature study describing a “hidden” looping circuit between the spinal cord and brain that appears to selectively drive chronic mechanical pain in mice while remaining distinct from pathways involved in acute, protective pain and normal touch. In mouse models, silencing nodes in the loop reduced injury-induced mechanical hypersensitivity due to inflammation or nerve injury, whereas repeated activation could create lasting hypersensitivity in healthy mice. The host emphasizes this is basic science, not a chiropractic or manipulation study, but argues it offers chiropractors a clearer framework for communicating chronic pain: persistent pain may reflect altered nervous system processing and sensitization rather than ongoing tissue damage, supporting more accurate, respectful patient conversations and reinforcing the value of conservative care without overclaiming mechanisms. 00:00 Series Purpose 00:25 Study Overview 01:09 Important Caveats 01:40 Why Pain Persists 02:22 Mapping The Loop 03:52 Clinical Communication 04:45 Fear And Function 05:34 Beyond Structural Stories 06:00 Touch Versus Pain 06:55 Layered Pain Biology 07:31 Practical Takeaways 08:16 Read And Reflect 08:47 Closing Thoughts Study Citation Wang, Q., Lee, J. H., Nachtrab, G., Yuan, Y., Yuan, L., Qi, W., Mohr, M. A., Xiong, J., Horowitz, M. A., & Chen, X. (2026). Deconstruction of a spino-brain–spinal cord circuit that drives chronic pain. Nature. Published online April 1, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10296-y. Official article: Suggested Show Notes Format Study discussed in this episode: Wang, Q., Lee, J. H., Nachtrab, G., Yuan, Y., Yuan, L., Qi, W., Mohr, M. A., Xiong, J., Horowitz, M. A., & Chen, X. (2026). Deconstruction of a spino-brain–spinal cord circuit that drives chronic pain. Nature. Published online April 1, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10296-y. Read the study here: Optional Short Version Wang Q, Lee JH, Nachtrab G, et al. Deconstruction of a spino-brain–spinal cord circuit that drives chronic pain. Nature. Published online April 1, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10296-y. PCA Contact information: PCA Website: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] PCA Email: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org] PCA Study Spotlight, Chiropractic Research, Chronic Pain, Pain Science, Central Sensitization, Neuroscience, Musculoskeletal Care, Conservative Care, Patient Communication, Spine Care

16 de abr de 20268 min
episode PCA March President’s Address with Dr. Andrew Heck | artwork

PCA March President’s Address with Dr. Andrew Heck |

PCA March President’s Address with Dr. Andrew Heck | Legislative Progress, Advocacy & Northeast Chiro Summit In this special Spinal Chat episode from the Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association, PCA President Dr. Andrew Heck shares the March President’s Address with updates on spring momentum and ongoing legislative, regulatory, and reimbursement challenges. He reports progress on delegation restoration through House Bill 1106, scope modernization, copay reform, and the sports working group’s efforts on return-to-play physicals and sideline care, as well as continued Capitol meetings led by PCA leadership and staff. Dr. Heck thanks nearly 70 members and non-members for supporting the postcard campaign and emphasizes that engagement from doctors, staff, patients, and communities strengthens chiropractic’s voice. He also previews the Northeast Chiro Summit (May 1–3) at the Kalahari Resort, noting record attendance and encouraging participation, membership, PAC support, and advocacy involvement. 00:00 Welcome and Setup 00:39 Springtime Reflection 01:13 Legislative Progress 01:56 Member Advocacy Push 02:27 Northeast Summit Preview 03:08 Conference Details 03:25 Closing Thanks 03:33 Get Involved Call 04:11 Final Sendoff PCA Contact information: PCA Website: https://pennchiro.org/ [https://pennchiro.org/] PCA Email: pca@pennchiro.org [pca@pennchiro.org] Spinal Chat, Pennsylvania Chiropractic Association, Dr. Andrew Heck, President’s Address, Chiropractic Advocacy, HB1106, Scope Modernization, Copay Reform, Sports Chiropractic, PCA PAC, Northeast Chiro Summit, Pennsylvania Chiropractors

14 de abr de 20264 min