Trauma-Informed Care

Why Trauma-Informed Care Matters in Chiropractic

Chiropractic involves hands-on touch, often in vulnerable areas of the body. For trauma survivors, being touched by a healthcare provider—even with good intentions—can trigger a fear or stress response. Trauma-informed care means understanding this, anticipating it, and building sessions around it rather than pushing past or through it.

What Trauma-Informed Means in Practice

Every technique is explained before it’s applied for the first time. You can pause, stop, or redirect at any time—always. We move slowly and check in frequently about comfort and sensation. We follow your lead: if your body says ‘not today,’ we respect that. We never interpret a stress response as uncooperativeness. We understand that healing is nonlinear and some days are harder than others.

Creating a Body That Feels Safe

The goal of trauma-informed chiropractic isn’t just pain relief—it’s helping you build a felt sense of safety in your body. When touch becomes associated with care, relief, and respect rather than pain or threat, something shifts at a very deep level. This is slow work. But it’s transformative work.

Who This Is For

Sexual abuse and assault survivors, people with PTSD or complex trauma, those with a history of medical trauma or healthcare that didn’t feel safe, and anyone who has avoided physical care because their body doesn’t feel like a safe place.