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My interest in healthcare started at a young age. As a baseball player, I sustained a significant head injury during a game and was introduced to chiropractic care during my recovery. Seeing firsthand how quickly I was able to return to normal function sparked my interest in the profession. My father also played a major role in introducing me to chiropractic and helping me understand the impact healthcare providers can have on a person’s quality of life.
As I entered practice, however, I quickly realized that many of the patients seeking my help were suffering from chronic injuries and persistent pain that weren’t responding to traditional conservative approaches. I found myself asking why so many people were continuing to suffer despite seeing multiple practitioners and undergoing years of treatment.
The answer, in many cases, was that chronic injuries are fundamentally different from acute injuries. Over time, the body remodels damaged tissue, creating scar tissue, fibrosis, altered biomechanics and compensation patterns that become deeply ingrained. Simply restoring joint mobility was often not enough.
That realization led me to expand far beyond traditional chiropractic care and build a multidisciplinary model focused on diagnosing and treating chronic soft tissue dysfunction. Today, my passion comes from helping patients who have often exhausted conventional options and providing solutions for conditions that many have been told they simply have to live with.
Moving beyond Trial and Error
One of the biggest challenges is the underdiagnosis and misdiagnosis of musculoskeletal conditions.
Many of the patients who come to our clinic have already seen multiple healthcare providers before arriving. Despite undergoing various treatments, many still don’t have a clear understanding of what is actually causing their pain.
When a patient doesn’t receive an accurate diagnosis, treatment often becomes a trial-and-error process. This can lead to prolonged suffering, unnecessary healthcare spending, repeated imaging and frustration for both patients and providers.
I believe the solution begins with a stronger emphasis on diagnostics and clinical reasoning. Regardless of profession, healthcare providers should prioritize identifying the exact pain generator whenever possible before initiating treatment. Early and accurate diagnosis not only improves outcomes but also helps direct patients toward the most appropriate provider and treatment strategy sooner.
Healthcare works best when practitioners collaborate and recognize when another discipline may be better suited to evaluate or manage a particular condition.
Reimagining Chronic Pain Treatment
I believe regenerative medicine and technology-driven soft tissue remodeling will have the greatest impact over the next decade.
We’re already seeing exciting developments in regenerative injection therapies, including biologic and cellular-based treatments that seek to improve the body’s ability to repair damaged tissues. As research continues to evolve, these therapies will likely become increasingly important in musculoskeletal medicine.
At the same time, we’re seeing significant advances in technology-based treatment approaches. Historically, many chronic injuries were managed through exercise, medication or symptom control. Today, we have technologies that allow us to directly target dysfunctional tissue and stimulate biological responses that were previously difficult to achieve non-surgically.
At Divergent Healthcare, we utilize several FDA and Health Canada-approved technologies designed to create controlled therapeutic disruption within chronically damaged tissue. This allows the body to re-enter a healing phase that may have stalled years earlier.
I believe the future lies in combining regenerative medicine, advanced technology and targeted rehabilitation to address both the biological and mechanical components of chronic injury.
One Diagnosis, One Strategy
This challenge ultimately inspired the creation of our multidisciplinary model.
Over the years, I came to appreciate that no single profession possesses all the tools required to manage complex chronic pain cases. Every discipline brings unique strengths, perspectives and treatment strategies.
At our clinic, physicians, chiropractors, physiotherapists, athletic therapists, kinesiologists, manual osteopaths, registered massage therapists and exercise specialists work together under a unified treatment strategy.
Rather than having patients receive disconnected care from multiple providers, everyone works toward the same diagnosis, objectives and outcome measures.
One of the concepts we emphasize is that chronic tissue often requires both disruption and stimulation. Some therapies are designed to break down fibrosis, adhesions and dysfunctional tissue patterns, while others focus on restoring mobility, improving circulation, enhancing movement quality and supporting recovery.
The key is communication and alignment. Once every practitioner understands the diagnosis, the treatment objectives and the physiological rationale behind the plan, collaboration becomes remarkably effective.
Mastering the Fundamentals
Remain curious and stay open-minded.
Healthcare is constantly evolving, and many of the assumptions we held ten years ago have changed dramatically. The best practitioners are lifelong learners who continue questioning, refining and improving their clinical approach.
I would also strongly encourage young practitioners to invest heavily in their diagnostic skills. The ability to accurately assess a patient, identify the source of dysfunction and develop a meaningful treatment plan is what ultimately separates good clinicians from great ones.
Develop strong palpation skills, learn to recognize tissue changes and spend time truly understanding how chronic injuries evolve over time. In many cases, patients will tell me that I’m the first practitioner who has physically examined the area causing their pain in a detailed and meaningful way.
Finally, don’t be afraid to collaborate. Some of the best outcomes occur when practitioners from different disciplines work together rather than viewing one another as competitors. When patient care becomes the primary focus, everyone benefits.
The articles from these contributors are based on their personal expertise and viewpoints, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of their employers or affiliated organizations.