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Make America healthy again

healthy

True health begins from within, and the MAHA Movement calls for a healthcare future integrated with chiropractic principles—empowering individuals through self-regulation, nervous system balance, movement, nutrition and mindset.

For more than a century, chiropractic has stood as one of the most evidence-based, results driven professions in healthcare; yet today, it remains one of the most underutilized. As our nation faces an unprecedented health crisis, it’s time for chiropractic to step boldly into its rightful leadership role. That’s exactly what the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Movement is all about.

At its core, MAHA is a national call to action to help people take ownership of their health, restore trust in natural healing and reestablish wellness as a personal responsibility, not just a medical transaction. It’s a movement rooted in the same values that define chiropractic: Self-healing, prevention, education and the power of the body to restore itself when interference is removed.

Today, our system is showing the cracks. Under the leadership of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new Secretary of Health and Human Services, we’re seeing long-overdue questions about the inefficiencies and biases in our healthcare structure, particularly the lack of access to evidence-based, holistic professions, such as chiropractic. For too long, the system has favored symptom management over wellness, pills over prevention and profit over people. The result? A nation in crisis.

What the research says

According to recent data, 76% of Americans now live with at least one chronic disease, and most adults over 60 suffer from two or more. Even more concerning, over 40% of school-aged children and adolescents now have a chronic condition; a statistic that would have been unthinkable just a generation ago. These are not merely numbers; they are reflections of a society that has lost its healthy compass.

Chiropractic must be foundational to the solution. As DCs, we understand true health doesn’t come from the outside in; it comes from the inside out. The MAHA Movement recognizes the future of healthcare depends on empowering individuals to take charge of their well-being, and that can only happen when we champion self-regulation, nervous system balance, movement, nutrition and mindset, the pillars that chiropractic has always upheld.

Knowledge is power

That’s why I wrote my new book, “SELF HEALTH: Reverse Chronic Disease, Restore Your Vitality and Transform Your Life—One Choice at a Time.” It’s designed to educate the consumer and bridge the gap between where we are and where we need to go as a nation. It teaches that health is not a one-time decision but a daily discipline, a commitment to making better choices today than we did yesterday. Make sure you discuss various conditions with your patients, such as obesity, sleep, cognitive decline and others. Offer them chiropractic care and natural solutions.

Our role, our voice

As DCs, we are uniquely positioned to lead this movement. Here are four strategies that will help you serve more people in your community, while establishing chiropractic care as a mainstay of healthcare.

Final thoughts on Make America Healthy Again

By empowering your patients with knowledge, you will spark more referrals than you’ve ever seen; because education inspires transformation, and transformation is contagious. America needs a new health paradigm, and chiropractic is the foundation. Together, let’s make America healthy again.

Fab Mancini, DC, FICC, FACC, has 35 years of experience as a doctor and entrepreneur. He has trained more than 40,000 practices through Parker Seminars and has mentored more than 200 CEOs to scale their vision and impact. For more information, contact Mancini on his website drfabmancini.com or by email at fab@drfabmancini.com. To order a copy of his book, visit drfabmancini.com/book.

References

  1. Li X, et al. Prevalence of multiple chronic conditions among adults in the all of US Research Program: Exploratory analysis. JMIR Form Res. 2025;9:e69138. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12088611/. Accessed October 29, 2025.
  2. Managing chronic health conditions. July 2024. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. https://www.cdc.gov/school-health-conditions/about/index.html. Accessed October 29, 2025.
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