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A letter from the editor

letter from the editor
Gloria N. Hall | Editor-in-Chief

Welcome to Issue 5 of Chiropractic Economics, which takes a deep dive into proven solutions to treat more patients by integrating nutritional guidance and supplementation protocols into your practice. For this issue, I am excited to have board-certified chiropractic internist and nutritionist, Cindy Howard, DC, provide her insight into the issue and the power of continual learning.

If you aren’t reading, you aren’t learning

Not long ago, I attended a leadership conference where a colleague said something that stuck with me: When we choose to become doctors, we choose a life of continual learning. He was right, and nearly three decades into practice, that truth matters more than ever.

I’ve spent years immersed in research, textbooks, journals and professional magazines, always looking for the next insight or tool to better serve my patients. When I needed a mental break, I turned to fiction, briefly stepping into someone else’s world before returning to the profession I chose: chiropractic.

Early on, I trusted nearly everything I read. Over time, that changed. The more I read, the more discerning I became. Accuracy mattered. So did structure, credibility and whether the content genuinely sparked curiosity or expanded my clinical thinking. I learned quickly that regular engagement with quality information sharpened not only my knowledge, but also my ability to communicate more effectively with patients.

Eventually, reading began to feel like a chore. Time felt scarce. Some journals didn’t hold my interest. Others disappointed with vague claims or questionable data. What shifted everything for me was learning where and with whom to invest my attention.

I began relying on trusted sources and respected peers, professionals who valued the written word and shared meaningful studies, research and commentary. I also leaned into publications within our profession that consistently invest in experts who want to give back to their readership. When learning becomes a shared experience, accessible, efficient and credible, it stops feeling overwhelming and starts feeling energizing.

That’s why magazines like Chiropractic Economics still matter. It’s easy to set a magazine aside, assuming you’ll get to it later. Another issue will arrive next month, after all. But when you intentionally build reading into your routine, those pages become a steady source of growth, perspective and inspiration.

This issue of Chiropractic Economics is a great example. Inside, you’ll find timely discussions on precision nutrition, personalized supplementation and nutritional neuroprotection; topics that patients increasingly ask about, often influenced by what they see and hear on social media. Having evidence-based context allows us to educate with confidence and credibility.

You’ll also find content that supports practice leadership and entrepreneurship, resources that help us lead our teams more effectively and continue refining our skills as business owners. Articles on communication strategies, emerging therapies and patient education remind us that clinical excellence and operational strength go hand in hand.

I even found myself rereading my own contribution on burnout and resilience. Despite teaching on the subject regularly, I still need those reminders. Learning isn’t only about mastery; it’s about practice. Sometimes the lesson we most need is the one we’re already sharing with others.

This issue is packed with insight. Wherever you start—an article, a product page or a clinical feature—I encourage you to flip one page forward or back and explore something you might not have chosen initially. You may be surprised by what you discover.

Continual learning fuels growth, innovation, creativity and ultimately better outcomes for our patients and for ourselves.

Happy reading—and happy learning. —Cindy M. Howard, DC

I hope you find value in this issue and every issue of Chiropractic Economics. Are there topics you want to see covered? Reach out. I’d love to hear from you.

 

 

 

 

Gloria N. Hall
Editor-in-chief

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