Finding a way in and making it stick: an exploration of chiropractor experiences working in team-oriented elite sport practice settings.

Corrie Myburgh, Alexander D Lee, Mohsen Kazemi, Samuel Howarth, Jacob Hill, Silvano Mior
Author Information
  1. Corrie Myburgh: Psychology of Sport, Excellence and Health, Syddansk Universitet Det Sundhedsvidenskabelige Fakultet, Odense, Funen, Denmark. ORCID
  2. Alexander D Lee: CMCC, Santo Andre, Quebec, Canada.
  3. Mohsen Kazemi: Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
  4. Samuel Howarth: Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. ORCID
  5. Jacob Hill: Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
  6. Silvano Mior: Graduate Education and Research Programs, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Abstract

Interprofessional healthcare teams have become the benchmark for optimising athlete health and performance in high-stakes sports. Despite a history of utility as provider partners, chiropractors are currently a relatively underutilised human resource in this rapidly developing and challenging field. Consequently, our study explored the global experiences and distinct perspectives of elite-level career sports chiropractors. Through a qualitative explorative single case study, we purposively sampled and interviewed 15 chiropractors active in elite-level athletic contexts. Professional characteristics and competencies', 'Running the gamut of professional career development' and 'Navigating team development in a small organisational structure' emerged as the three key themes from the data. Our data indicate that chiropractors gain provider as members of the elite athletic health and performance management team as multirole manual medicine practitioners. However, thriving in a team-oriented practice, this context appears to be reliant on their capacity for development as part of a small organisational group.

Keywords

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Word Cloud

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