# “Guidelines… yeah, they just haven’t felt relevant to me.” A qualitative exploration of chiropractors’ perspectives on physical activity promotion

**Authors:** Matthew Fernandez, Kathryn Di, Marina Pinheiro, Katie de Luca, Jeffrey Hebert, Peter Stilwell

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10538127251350848 · Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation · 2025-06-19

## TL;DR

This study explores how chiropractors view promoting physical activity, finding they rely on personal experience despite limited knowledge of guidelines.

## Contribution

The study provides new qualitative insights into chiropractors' perspectives and practices regarding physical activity promotion.

## Key findings

- Chiropractors often rely on personal intuition and experience to promote physical activity.
- Limited knowledge of physical activity guidelines is a common barrier among chiropractors.
- Patient motivation and longer appointment times are seen as enablers for promoting physical activity.

## Abstract

Globally, almost one-third of adults are considered physically inactive. Chiropractors knownly promote physical activity (PA) within their musculoskeletal management plans, despite their limited PA and sedentary behavior (SB) guideline knowledge.

To deepen our understanding of chiropractors’ perspectives, including factors that may influence PA promotion. Specifically our objectives are to (1) explore chiropractors’ knowledge of PA guidelines, (2) examine chiropractors’ practices in PA assessment and advice, and (3) identify barriers, enablers, and factors influencing PA promotion in chiropractic.

Twenty registered Australian chiropractors were interviewed to understand their perspectives on promoting PA in practice. We used a qualitative descriptive approach with inductive content analysis to identify patterns and themes.

Four themes captured chiropractors’ perspectives regarding PA: (1) chiropractors striving to take a person-centered approach to PA promotion, (2) chiropractors had limited knowledge of the PA/SB guidelines, (3) chiropractors relied on their personal intuitions and experience to try and be PA role models for their patients, and (4) chiropractors identified important enablers including longer appointment time and patient motivation as well as barriers such as limited knowledge, skill and time. Chiropractors identified interest and motivation as patient barriers.

Chiropractors have limited PA/SB guideline knowledge but nevertheless report being confident, safe and person-centered with respect to PA promotion, often relying on their own experiences to be PA role models for their patients. Supporting behavior change among chiropractors, while addressing time constraints and patient motivation are important considerations.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12783367/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12783367