Chiropractic Malpractice Claims
Chiropractic malpractice claims arise when a licensed chiropractor's treatment falls below the accepted standard of care and causes measurable patient harm. These claims occupy a defined subset of medical malpractice law, governed by state licensing statutes, professional association guidelines, and general tort principles. Understanding how these claims are classified, evaluated, and litigated requires examining the specific injury patterns common to chiropractic practice and the evidentiary thresholds courts apply to them.
Definition and scope
Chiropractic malpractice is professional negligence committed by a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) whose conduct departs from the standard of care applicable to that profession and produces a legally cognizable injury. All 50 states license chiropractors under discrete chiropractic practice acts administered by state boards — for example, the California Board of Chiropractic Examiners operates under California Business and Professions Code §§ 1000–1011, and the Texas Board of Chiropractic Examiners operates under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 201. These licensing frameworks define the scope of permissible practice and establish the regulatory floor against which conduct is measured.
The standard of care in chiropractic malpractice is typically framed as the degree of care, skill, and treatment ordinarily exercised by a reasonably competent chiropractor under similar circumstances. The American Chiropractic Association (ACA) publishes clinical practice guidelines, and the Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE) sets accreditation standards that courts and expert witnesses frequently consult when defining baseline expectations.
Chiropractic claims are classified as types of medical malpractice claims, meaning the same four foundational elements apply: duty, breach, causation, and damages. The scope of chiropractic malpractice is distinct from general physician malpractice in that it centers narrowly on manual manipulation techniques, patient screening decisions, and the DC's failure to refer when presentation exceeds chiropractic scope.
How it works
A chiropractic malpractice claim progresses through a structured sequence that mirrors the broader medical malpractice filing process:
- Injury identification — The patient identifies an adverse outcome temporally linked to chiropractic treatment (e.g., vertebral artery dissection following cervical manipulation).
- Medical records review — Counsel and retained experts review treatment notes, intake forms, radiographic reports, and referral documentation. Medical records are central to establishing the timeline and clinical decisions made.
- Standard of care analysis — A qualified chiropractic expert reviews the DC's conduct against published clinical guidelines. Most states require a sworn affidavit or certificate of merit from a licensed DC at or near filing; pre-suit requirements vary by jurisdiction.
- Causation establishment — Plaintiffs must prove that the chiropractor's breach — not an underlying pre-existing condition — proximately caused the injury. This is frequently the most contested element in cervical manipulation cases, where atherosclerosis or pre-existing vascular anomaly may be an alternative cause.
- Damages quantification — Economic and non-economic damages are calculated. Damage caps by state may apply; as of the most recent National Conference of State Legislatures compilations, more than 30 states impose some form of cap on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases.
- Expert testimony — Expert witness requirements in chiropractic cases typically demand a DC expert rather than an MD, because courts evaluate conduct against the chiropractic — not medical — standard of care.
- Resolution — Claims resolve through settlement, mediation, or trial verdict.
Malpractice insurers underwriting chiropractic practices track claims through mandatory reporting to the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB), a federal repository maintained by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) under 45 C.F.R. Part 60. Payments made on behalf of licensed chiropractors must be reported to the NPDB within 30 days of payment.
Common scenarios
Chiropractic malpractice claims concentrate around 5 recurring injury categories:
- Vertebral artery dissection (VAD) — Cervical high-velocity low-amplitude (HVLA) manipulation is the most litigated chiropractic technique. VAD following cervical manipulation can result in stroke. Studies cited in the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics have examined the association, though causation remains an area of active scientific dispute.
- Cauda equina syndrome — Lumbar manipulation can, in rare cases, aggravate or precipitate cauda equina syndrome, a surgical emergency involving compression of lumbosacral nerve roots. Claims hinge on whether the DC identified red-flag symptoms before proceeding.
- Fracture aggravation — Treating a patient with undiagnosed osteoporosis, metastatic bone disease, or an existing compression fracture can cause or worsen fracture injury. Failure to obtain pre-treatment radiographs when clinically indicated is a documented breach pattern.
- Failure to refer — A chiropractor who continues treating a patient whose presentation indicates a condition outside chiropractic scope — such as a cord compression requiring neurosurgical evaluation — may face liability for the delay in appropriate care. This overlaps conceptually with misdiagnosis and delayed diagnosis malpractice.
- Informed consent failure — Patients must be informed of material risks associated with manipulation, particularly cervical HVLA. Inadequate disclosure of stroke risk has supported standalone informed consent claims in jurisdictions applying the patient-centered disclosure standard.
Decision boundaries
Distinguishing a viable chiropractic malpractice claim from an adverse outcome that does not constitute negligence requires examining three critical boundaries:
Malpractice vs. known complication — Not every adverse outcome following chiropractic treatment is malpractice. A recognized complication occurring despite proper technique and adequate informed consent is not automatically a breach. Courts and expert witnesses distinguish between inherent procedural risks and departures from accepted technique.
Chiropractic standard vs. medical standard — Because chiropractors are not physicians, the applicable standard of care is measured against what a reasonably competent DC — not an MD or osteopath — would have done. This distinction controls expert qualification: an orthopedic surgeon cannot ordinarily testify to the chiropractic standard of care without demonstrated familiarity with chiropractic practice, a principle reinforced by Daubert and Frye gatekeeping standards applied by federal and state courts respectively.
Statute of limitations — Chiropractic malpractice claims are subject to the same medical malpractice statutes of limitations as other healthcare provider claims in most states, typically ranging from 1 to 3 years from the date of injury or discovery. The discovery rule may toll the limitations period where injury was not immediately apparent, and statutes of repose impose outer time limits in states that have enacted them.
Vicarious liability — When a chiropractor practices within a multidisciplinary clinic or as an employee of a larger health system, vicarious liability principles may extend exposure to the employing entity. Independent contractor arrangements reduce but do not eliminate institutional liability depending on the degree of control the entity exercised over the DC's practice.
The comparative fault framework also affects recovery: in states applying comparative negligence, a plaintiff who continued treatment against medical advice or concealed relevant health history may see damages reduced proportionally to their assigned fault percentage.
References
- American Chiropractic Association (ACA) — Clinical Practice Guidelines
- Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE) — Accreditation Standards
- National Practitioner Data Bank — HRSA, 45 C.F.R. Part 60
- California Business and Professions Code §§ 1000–1011 — Board of Chiropractic Examiners
- Texas Occupations Code Chapter 201 — Texas Board of Chiropractic Examiners
- National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) — Medical Liability/Malpractice Laws
- Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) — National Practitioner Data Bank