From Pain Scores to Performance Metrics
The chiropractic profession's reliance on pain scores as a primary measure of success is an incomplete and often misleading indicator of true recovery. While reducing a patient's pain is a critical first step, pain intensity correlates poorly with actual tissue health and functional capacity. This disconnect leads to patients discontinuing care prematurely once symptoms subside, resulting in high rates of recurrence and the perception that conservative care offers only temporary relief. A more effective approach aligns outcome measures with the phases of healing. Initially, pain reduction is key to restoring a sense of safety and enabling movement. However, care must then transition to focus on performance metrics, such as tolerance to activity, movement quality, and functional endurance. By contextualizing pain within a broader functional framework during the review of findings, chiropractors can shift the patient's focus from "why it hurts" to "what is limiting recovery." This outcome-driven model improves patient adherence and delivers durable results, demonstrating chiropractic’s value in restoring long-term function and reducing downstream healthcare burdens. Pain may open the door, but performance defines a complete recovery.
