5 Common Misconceptions About Chiropractors

Myths of Chiropractic Care

Those of you who follow these periodic blog-posts may remember my April 18, 2025 “rant” entitled “70 and Out? – Mobility!” If you have ever experienced severe back or neck pain, I recommend revisiting this piece and skeptics, also read the article below. My chiropractors literally “saved me!” In my opinion, better than any MRI/x-ray, weeks of standard physical therapy, or MD intervention (pills, shots or surgeries), the chiropractic care of George and his son Benjamin Fraudin offered me the fastest progressive recovery while guiding me to take “baby steps” towards less pain, better mobility and flexibility! They diagnosed the exact location of my compressed discs, manually adjusted my spine, and provided exercises to help me transition out of the acute phase of my sciatica. I’m coming up to my one-year anniversary of needing a cane, TENS machine, and the rental of an electric wheelchairs during the four-day PMEA Annual Conference at Kalahari Resort in the Poconos. THANK YOU, Fraudin Advanced Chiropractic and Rehab in Pittsburgh, PA.

The following guest post authored by Jeanett Tapia was shared by Intouch Chiropractic. Intouch Chiropractic is a boutique chiropractic practice in San Diego, CA, specializing in NUCCA upper cervical care, spinal decompression, and advanced therapeutic treatments. 

If you’ve spent any time researching ways to manage pain, improve your balance, or simply stay mobile as you get older, you’ve probably come across chiropractic care. And if you’re like many of us who’ve reached our retirement years, you may have also come across a reason not to try it, whether from a well-meaning friend, an outdated article, or simply an image stuck in your head of someone’s spine being violently “cracked” into submission.

Here’s the truth: many of the most persistent beliefs about chiropractic care are simply wrong. And those misconceptions may be quietly standing between you and a better quality of life.

Let’s clear the air.

Misconception #1: “Chiropractic care means painful cracking and twisting”

This is, by far, the most common reason seniors avoid exploring chiropractic care. The dramatic neck-snap you’ve seen on TV or heard about secondhand bears little resemblance to what many modern chiropractic practices actually do.

In fact, there are even highly specialized approaches, like NUCCA (National Upper Cervical Chiropractic Association), that involve zero popping, cracking, or twisting of the spine whatsoever. NUCCA chiropractic care focuses on a precise, gentle correction of the atlas vertebra (the top bone of the spine), using only a light, calculated touch near the base of the skull. Most patients are surprised by how mild the treatment feels.

For seniors, retirees, or anyone with concerns about bone density or joint sensitivity, this kind of approach can be a genuine game-changer. 

Misconception #2: “It’s too risky for older adults”

Many seniors assume chiropractic care is designed for younger, healthier bodies and that it carries real danger for those with osteoporosis, arthritis, or other age-related conditions. This concern is understandable, but largely unfounded when care is delivered by a qualified, experienced practitioner.

Trained chiropractors assess every patient individually, reviewing medical history, imaging, and physical condition before determining an approach. Techniques are adapted specifically for older adults, emphasizing comfort and safety at every step. Research consistently shows that when performed by a qualified professional, chiropractic care can improve mobility and decrease pain without serious risk, even in elderly patients.

Are there chiropractors that should be avoided? Absolutely. But that’s true with any profession or expertise. For seniors looking for things like treatment for chronic back pain, a good chiropractor can go a long way.

Misconception #3: “Chiropractors only treat back pain”

It’s true that most people walk into a chiropractor’s office with back pain. But limiting chiropractic care to a single symptom is like saying a cardiologist only treats chest pain.

Spinal misalignment, particularly at the top of the cervical spine, can affect far more than your back. Common conditions that respond well to chiropractic care, especially for older adults, include:

  • Chronic neck pain and stiffness
  • Headaches and migraines
  • Balance and coordination problems (a major fall-risk factor for seniors)
  • Joint pain and reduced range of motion
  • Sleep disturbances and fatigue
  • Brain fog and reduced mental clarity

For retirees trying to stay active, whether that means walking the golf course, playing with grandchildren, or simply navigating daily life with confidence, these benefits matter enormously.

Misconception #4: “You’ll need to go forever once you start”

This misconception often comes from a misunderstanding of how chiropractic care works. While some patients choose to make regular maintenance visits a part of their long-term wellness routine (similar to dental checkups), you are never “locked in.”

Many patients come in with a specific concern, receive a course of treatment, and achieve lasting relief, particularly with upper cervical approaches like NUCCA, which aim to deliver corrections that hold over time rather than requiring constant repeat adjustments. The goal is always to restore your body’s natural alignment so that it can maintain itself more effectively.

Your treatment plan is yours. A good chiropractor will communicate clearly, set realistic expectations, and respect your pace and goals.

Misconception #5: “It’s not real medicine, my doctor won’t approve”

Chiropractic care has long suffered from an image problem as being “fringe” or unscientific. That reputation is increasingly outdated. Numerous peer-reviewed studies demonstrate the efficacy of chiropractic adjustments for pain management, mobility improvement, and quality of life, and many primary care physicians now actively refer patients to chiropractors as part of a complementary care plan.

For seniors especially, the appeal of a drug-free, non-surgical approach to managing chronic pain and maintaining mobility is hard to overstate. 

It’s not about replacing your doctor, it’s about giving your body more tools to work with.

Why This Matters for Retirees and Seniors

Mobility is independence. The ability to move freely, stay balanced, and live without chronic pain directly shapes the quality of your retirement years. Chiropractic care, particularly the gentle, precision-based approaches now available, offers a compelling, low-risk option for seniors who want to stay active and avoid the side effects of long-term medication use.

If you’ve dismissed chiropractic care based on any of the myths above, it may be worth taking a second look, especially at upper cervical approaches designed with your comfort and safety in mind.

PKF

© 2026 Paul K. Fox and Eric White

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Post-Employment Prep – New Places to Go

Follow the Wonderful “Gold Brick Road” to More Retirement Resources

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This blog-site will continuously explore new/better research on and suggestions for a happy, healthy, and meaningful transition to retirement. This month, it seems we hit the mother-lobe of recent discoveries for this journey… four more for the road! (To catch-up reading all the blogs for retirees, click on the category link “Retirement Resources” at the right.)

Jean Potuchek

Probably one of the most insightful and expansive treasures of online articles on retirement is Stepping Into the Future – A Retirement Journal by Jean Potuchek, who defines herself as “a professional sociologist who has just stepped into the next phase of my life, retirement, after more than thirty years of college teaching.” She succinctly states her purpose: “This blog is about my experience of that new phase of life.”

enjoying-retirement-1358850-1Take a deep breath, find an easy chair, ignore your cell phone’s texts/calls, and plunge into her full website: https://stepintofuture.wordpress.com/category/retirement-transition/. Or, if you prefer, set aside 30 minutes and read a few of her individual posts (below). I have just begun to “crack this nut” – her blog-site is more extensive than anything else I have found!

choir-1438273As a music educator, this last title peaked my interest. We urge every retiree to revisit their creativity roots and seek renewed opportunities to enjoy music as a lifelong pursuit. (We have already posted reprints of several of my articles on this subject from PMEA News, the state journal of the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association, including Sing Your Heart Out, Now and in Retirement and It’s Time to “Dust off Your Chops” (join a community band/orchestra).

Potuchek relates her rationale for a quest in more spontaneity in her retired life and participating in a “creative aging singing workshop” sponsored by the Portland Public Library:

I am never going to be a totally spontaneous free spirit; it’s just not in my character. I like structure, and I don’t see myself giving up scheduling as a way to structure my days and weeks. But as I get weekly practice in spontaneity, I am learning to loosen up and be more flexible with my schedules. My first spontaneous jump into a new activity has brought the joys of choral singing back into my life, introduced me to some new friends, and helped me to recover long-forgotten skills (like reading music). Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? For this old dog, retirement is proving to be a time of growth and learning. – Jean Potuchek

Top 55 Retirement Planning Websites

the-end-of-the-road-1207268-1Generally, I am not much in favor of perusing commercial websites on planning for retirement, especially those by investment counselors, but Ernie Zelinski (author of bestsellers like How to Retire Happy, Wild, and Free) sent me this link: http://goldretiree.com/retirement-planning. Zelinski’s own “Retirement Cafe” (http://www.retirement-cafe.com/) is the second website listed, and seems to archive the foundations of much of his subsequent writings. Here is his “10 Dumbest Retirement Moves.”

  1. Purchasing a larger home than you need or than you can afford
  2. Watching a lot of TV — more than an hour and a half a day is excessive!
  3. Gambling
  4. Spending a lot of time shopping
  5. Complaining about life
  6. Being afraid to spend the kid’s inheritance
  7. Being a miser with your money
  8. Planning to work forever — something NOT advocated in The World’s Best Retirement Book.
  9. Neglecting your health by not indulging in vigorous physical exercise every day
  10. Not making new friendships and neglecting old friends

If you are concerned about your personal finances, investment, life styles, travel, or other issues in planning for your “golden years,” goldretiree.com may be valuable. Besides Zelinski’s site, I was taken with the following writers:

aarpThe final entry at goldretiree.com, AARP is worth mentioning here (http://www.aarp.org/). I was one of those 40-something spouses who automatically became a member when his wife turned 50 and she joined; I was neither ready nor expecting it. However, the AARP magazine and online materials are excellent, and span topics about travel, health care and coping with aging, finance, dining and cooking, etc. plus special discounts and benefits.

If you like, the entire listing of retirement websites is provided at this link: GoldRetiree.com

Stephen Price

In my last blog-post on retirement, “Three Exit Lanes to Retirement Self-Helhowtosurviveretirement_pricep Guides,” I briefly mentioned Stephen Price’s book “How to Survive Retirement: Reinventing Yourself for the Life You’ve Always Wanted.” No one resource has everything… but this book comes closest to covering the greatest variety of subjects, exploring such possibly mundane (?) topics of financial planning, making your home elder-friendly, and social security information, to riding the up-and-down emotions of “change” and retirement. The book’s table of contents is eclectic:

  1. Entering Retirement
  2. Discovering the New You
  3. The New Realities of Money
  4. Making a Move: Post-Retirement Relocating
  5. Do Unto Others: Opportunities to Volunteer
  6. Travel
  7. Encore Employment, or Returning to Work
  8. Planning for a Healthy Retirement

Volunteer Gardener

Of special merit, Price shares 14 pages of ideas on volunteering, with a gang of valuable websites on which to follow-up… everything from animal shelters, museums, zoos, aquariums, and conservation groups to business mentoring, foster grand-parenting, senior companions, and child advocates.

The last full chapter, written by Laurence Burd, MD, starts with a quote by the late PA Senator Arlen Specter: “There’s nothing more important than our good health – that’s our principal capital asset,” and dives into the effects of aging and how to maintain good health throughout “our maturing years” (or second childhood?).  I have never seen a manual for retirees that goes into such detail on these issues:

  • Decline of Organ Performance and Function
  • Wrinkles and Dry Skin
  • Gray Hair
  • Balding
  • Hearing Loss
  • Decreased Vision
  • Dental Problems
  • Skeletal System
  • Cardiovascular System
  • High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)medicine-1419753
  • Swelling of Ankles and Feet
  • Heartburn
  • Constipation
  • Urination Irregularities
  • Decreased Sex Drive
  • Memory Loss
  • Help, I’ve Fallen and I Can’t Get Up
  • Insomnia
  • Depression and Anxiety

This is definitely a book worth buying, reading, and keeping!

Although a life of ease may have been your dream, retirement brings with it a host of questions, problems, and responsibilities that never occurred to you and may now seem insurmountable. How to Survive Retirement will help you plan for most any eventuality during the golden years. – Steven Price/back cover

Finally… The Ultimate Resource Guide/Bibliography

I tried to revise, assemble, and share in one place all of the retirement resources I have found. Click on this link to download the ultimate retiree resource guide 072216. You do not have to be a former music educator to use this reference list to gain a perspective on research and assistance to preparing and managing the life-changing adventure of retirement.

This document is my present to you. It cannot get much more comprehensive or convenient to find/use this collection of “sound advice” from advisors who themselves have successfully found happiness, good health, and real purpose in retirement life.

pmeaUpdates to my presentation “Surviving and Reveling in Retirement” for the PMEA Summer 2016 Conference are posted on the PMEA retired members website:  http://www.pmea.net/retired-members/. If you are music teacher retiree and taught or live in the state of Pennsylvania, we recommend joining PMEA to enjoy the numerous benefits of networking with fellow colleagues, reading publications, supporting music advocacy efforts, realizing ongoing professional and leadership development, and other programs. One advantage of being “senior citizens” is that our dues and conference registration fees are significantly reduced! For more information, please go to the PMEA website: http://www.pmea.net/membership-information/.

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PKF

© 2016 Paul K. Fox