
Chiropractic practices that integrate modern therapies, track real results and communicate clearly are better able to engage patients with chronic conditions and help them manage long-term health.
Many heard this statistic and the implication of opportunity in the profession: National survey data show roughly 11% of US adults used chiropractic care in 2022.1 That number is not a referendum on clinical value; it’s a signal chiropractic is still too often framed narrowly as episodic back pain care, with relevance fading once symptoms improve.
The opportunity before the profession is to expand beyond that ceiling by modernizing how chiropractic is positioned within healthcare. This does not require abandoning manual care. It requires building a complete conservative model that integrates treatment, education, prevention and measurable outcomes.
The market is already moving in this direction. Patients are increasingly investing in prevention, performance and longevity long before disease thresholds are met. The Global Wellness Institute estimates the global wellness economy reached $6.8 trillion in 2024 and projects growth to $9.8 trillion by 2029.2 Overall, most analysts place the value of the wellness market well into the trillions.3
This shift also creates an opportunity to manage chronic disease burden conservatively, where disability and cost, not pain alone, drive healthcare utilization. Arthritis affects tens of millions of Americans and frequently results in activity limitation.4 Osteoarthritis alone impacts more than 32.5 million US adults, many of whom cycle through care only after function has already declined.5
Diabetes-related complications follow a similar pattern. An estimated 15.8% of US adults have diabetes and peripheral neuropathy is common yet often under-recognized until balance, gait and mobility are compromised; however, intervention can rapidly mitigate these limitations.6,7
Modern conservative therapies expand chiropractic’s ability to intervene earlier and manage these conditions more effectively when they are applied programmatically rather than as stand-alone tools. Spinal decompression was one of the earliest examples of this evolution. When used as part of a structured care pathway, rather than as a mechanical substitute for traction, it helped chiropractors manage discogenic and degenerative presentations more effectively, reinforcing chiropractic’s role in long-term conservative management rather than episodic symptom relief.
High-intensity laser therapy represents a similar advancement. Rather than serving solely as a pain-modulating modality, it is increasingly used to mitigate inflammatory burden and support tissue recovery in conditions such as diabetic peripheral neuropathy, where early functional decline may occur in the absence of significant pain.8
Radial pressure wave therapy has further expanded conservative options, particularly in recalcitrant musculoskeletal conditions and earlier-stage osteoarthritis. When applied early, shockwave therapy may influence tissue remodeling and load tolerance, helping delay or reduce the need for surgical escalation.9
A defining feature of modern chiropractic practice is the move beyond pain as the primary outcome. Pain remains clinically relevant, especially early in care, but it is a poor stand-alone indicator of disease risk, functional decline or long-term capacity. This concept also necessitates objective measures such as movement analysis, gait assessment, balance testing and functional capacity metrics, which often identify impairment well before pain emerges, particularly in chronic and degenerative conditions.10 These data-driven insights allow chiropractors to intervene earlier, demonstrate progress more clearly and conduct review-of-findings conversations that shift patients from being passive recipients of care to acting as informed participants in their issue prevention and recovery.
Modernization also extends to communication and accountability. Digital platforms and AI-assisted tools are increasingly used to reinforce care plans, provide education, track progress and maintain engagement between visits. These systems help sustain adherence after pain resolves and allow chiropractic care to function as a longitudinal health strategy rather than a series of isolated visits.
The profession’s growth will not come from competing in the same pain-relief space as medications or injections. It will come from owning the conservative care lane those approaches cannot deliver: Function-first, prevention-oriented, cost-effective management across the lifespan.
When chiropractic bridges innovation with proven conservative care, it moves beyond being a visit-based service and becomes a primary conservative healthspan strategy. This is how the profession expands its reach and relevance in a rapidly changing healthcare economy.
Final thoughts: Implications for clinical practice
Practices that integrate modern therapies, objective outcome measures and education-driven communication models are better positioned to engage younger, prevention-focused populations, while delivering meaningful value to patients managing chronic conditions. By modernizing thoughtfully, chiropractors can serve as primary conservative care managers within a healthcare system increasingly focused on function, value and long-term capacity.
Christopher M. Proulx, DC, PhD(ABD), CSCS, is a doctor of chiropractic and sport scientist with advanced training in clinical neuroscience, exercise physiology and conservative sports medicine. He has authored peer-reviewed articles and lectures nationally on therapeutic technology integration, injury recovery models and evidence-based rehabilitation. Proulx is currently the Vice President of Clinical Affairs and Strategy for Medray Laser and Technology.
References
- National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Chiropractic: In Depth. https://www.nccih.nih.gov/health/chiropractic-in-depth. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- Global Wellness Institute. Global Wellness Economy Monitor 2025. https://globalwellnessinstitute.org/industry-research/2025-global-wellness-economy-monitor/ . Accessed March 2, 2026.
- McKinsey & Company. The future of wellness. https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/consumer-packaged-goods/our-insights/future-of-wellness-trends. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Arthritis data and statistics. https://www.cdc.gov/cdi/indicator-definitions/arthritis.html. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Osteoarthritis. https://archive.cdc.gov/www_cdc_gov/arthritis/types/osteoarthritis.htm. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Diabetes FastStats. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/diabetes.htm. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- Ullah S, Iqbal K, Rizwan M. Gait and postural control deficits in diabetic patients with peripheral neuropathy compared to healthy controls. Bioengineering. 2025;12(10):1034. https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering12101034. Accessed March 2, 2026.
- Hamblin MR. Mechanisms and applications of the anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation. AIMS Biophys. 2017;4(3):337-361. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5523874/ . Accessed March 2, 2026.
- Wang CJ. Extracorporeal shockwave therapy in musculoskeletal disorders. J Orthop Surg Res. 2012;7:11. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3342893/ . Accessed March 2, 2026.
- Hulleck AA, et al. Present and future of gait assessment in clinical practice: Towards the application of novel trends and technologies. Front Med Technol. 2022;4:901331. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9800936/ . Accessed March 2, 2026.