Celebrating Chiropractic Awareness Week 2026

The stories that remind us why we care

In every chiropractor’s career, there are patient stories that stay with you.

It might be someone who came into clinic worried that ongoing pain could force them out of a physically demanding job. It might be a patient recovering from injury who has started to avoid movement altogether, unsure what their body can handle.

Sometimes the difference is felt in small but meaningful ways. Walking the dog again, getting back to the activities they enjoy, or lifting a grandchild for the first time in months. These moments tend to stay with practitioners throughout their careers.

They remind us why many of us chose to work in healthcare in the first place. This year’s Chiropractic Awareness Week (Monday 13th April – Sunday 19th April) focuses on those memories. Our theme “The patient I’ll never forget” invites chiropractors and BCA members across the UK to reflect on the individuals whose journeys have stayed with them and shaped their professional lives.

For me, that patient was a retired man who came to see me after years of chronic lower back pain. He used to be active, walking, cycling, and spending time with his family, but as the pain took hold, he grew more isolated. After seeing an MRI, he felt even more hopeless, convinced the images showed his spine was failing, and he began to struggle with his mental wellbeing. Step by step, we worked together, helping him understand the MRI in the context of his pain, using hands-on treatment to calm his back, and introducing gentle exercises. Slowly, he began to get better riding his bike again, going on walks with his son, and enjoying the sunshine without pain holding him back. These small wins remind me every day why I love what I do.

Looking beyond the symptoms

So why do stories matter? Musculoskeletal (MSK) problems are often described in clinical terms; pain levels, mobility, diagnostic findings. For patients, however, the experience is much broader than that.

Pain can affect someone’s ability to work, be with family members, exercise or take part in social activities. It can influence confidence and routine just as much as physical movement.

Understanding that wider context helps care to be tailored to the person in front you. Two patients may present with similar symptoms, yet their priorities can be entirely different. One patient may be focused on returning to work safely. Another may want to stay active in retirement. A runner may be working towards getting back to training, while a parent may simply want to get down on the floor to play with their child.

Conversations about those goals from the very first meeting help shape treatment plans that reflect what matters most to the patient.

Listening as part of good care

Across healthcare, there is growing recognition that communication and empathy are central to effective care. Patients want to feel that their concerns have been properly heard and understood, not just assessed.

For many people living with MSK pain, the impact isn’t always easy to describe in a short appointment. They may have been managing discomfort for months or adjusting their daily routines without realising how much those changes have affected their quality of life. Taking the time to listen helps bring those experiences into the conversation. Patients often describe how pain has started to shape the way they move, work or spend time with family - avoiding certain activities, turning down invitations, or approaching everyday tasks with caution.

When patients feel listened to, it often changes the tone of the consultation. They are more likely to feel comfortable asking questions, sharing concerns and understanding the advice they receive. For clinicians, these conversations offer valuable insight into how a condition is affecting someone’s day-to-day life.

In musculoskeletal health particularly, recovery is rarely instant. It often involves gradual improvement, adjustments to activity and rebuilding confidence in movement. Open communication between practitioner and patient helps support that process, allowing care to adapt as people regain strength, mobility and confidence.

A reminder of the difference we can make

Across the UK healthcare system, demand for MSK care continues to grow. The BCA’s Health Economics Report, in partnership with York Health Economic Consortium, showed that MSK conditions lead to over 30 million lost workday days per year. This is estimated to be responsible for more than £100 billion of lost productivity in the UK every year. 

At the same time, clinicians are often working within tight appointment times and currently patients are waiting up to 24 weeks for treatment. That can make it harder to fully understand the person behind the condition.

 If we want to deliver the best possible care for patients, our healthcare system needs to create space for those conversations to happen – wherever people choose to seek support, whether that’s within the NHS or in community settings such as chiropractic clinics.

Taking the time to understand someone’s experience of pain, their daily responsibilities and what recovery means for them is not separate from good clinical care. It is often what allows the right care to happen in the first place.



For more information about this year’s Chiropractic Awareness Week, please visit https://chiropractic-uk.co.uk/caw.

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