Assessment
History and examination help identify whether chiropractic care is suitable.
A plain-language guide to how we explain spinal function, subluxation, nervous-system irritation, adjustment and broader wellbeing support.
A chiropractor offers assessment and examination of the spine and nervous system for joint misalignment, known in the profession as subluxation. We explain how subluxation may irritate nerves and contribute to biomechanical concerns such as back pain, neck pain, headaches, jaw pain and joint pain.
Our care is not about chasing symptoms only. We also discuss movement, exercise, nutrition and lifestyle advice so you can support better function around your chiropractic care.
We describe the brain, spinal cord and spinal nerves as the body's communication system. The spine protects the spinal cord while allowing movement through the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral and coccygeal regions.
We use a dimmer-switch analogy for nerve irritation: function can be affected without being completely switched off. That idea is best read as a simple way to understand our assessment model, not as a promise about individual health outcomes.

We describe chiropractic adjustments as care used to help normalise improper spinal motion and restore joint function. The word chiropractic means "done by hand", and we distinguish chiropractic care from general manipulation by emphasising assessment, training and specific correction.
History and examination help identify whether chiropractic care is suitable.
Adjustment is considered when the findings indicate a joint movement concern.
We do not send you away without exercises, stretches or general health advice when relevant.
Early care focuses on the presenting concern and helping you understand what is contributing to discomfort or restricted movement.
Correction is described as work on the underlying movement and function patterns, not only the symptoms that brought you in.
Wellness care is framed as ongoing support for spinal function, movement habits and lifestyle choices where appropriate.
You may have questions about suitability, x-rays, training, ongoing care and the research often discussed around chiropractic.
No single care pathway suits every person. Your first consultation includes history and examination so we can decide whether care is appropriate or whether referral is a better step.
X-rays are not automatic. We may refer for x-rays if indicated, and they are bulk billed when required.
Chiropractic training includes anatomy, physiology, neurology, nutrition and manual or physical methods, with clinical rotations before practice.
No. We describe relief, correction and wellness as phases of care, but that does not mean every person needs lifelong treatment. Ongoing care should depend on the assessment findings, your goals and whether care remains useful.
Our research notes cite older studies as historical context, not as a promise of results. The cited material includes a 1991 RAND/UCLA monograph led by Dr Paul Shekelle on the appropriateness of spinal manipulation for low back pain; a 1992 MEDSTAT Data Base Review by Miron Stano, PhD, based on almost 400,000 chiropractic patients; and a Utah workers' compensation study by Jarvis et al. comparing back-injury claims with matching diagnostic codes. These references can help frame questions to ask during care, but individual results vary.