Clinical Collaboration with Jeffrey Cronk DC JD and Smart Injury Doctors
Clinical Focus: Personal injury evaluation, spinal biomechanics, radiographic analysis, conservative post-collision care
Written by: Dr. Justin Dick, DC
Clinical focus: Personal injury evaluation, spinal biomechanics, radiographic analysis, conservative post-collision care
Organization: Clear Life Scoliosis And Chiropractic Center, Charlotte, NC
Published: May 22, 2026
Last updated: May 22, 2026
Medically reviewed: May 22, 2026
Reviewed by: Corrine Holdridge M.S.
Disclosure
Dr. Justin Dick participates in the Smart Injury Doctors educational program founded by Jeffrey Cronk, DC, JD. Some of the videos below were produced for and uploaded by the Smart Injury Doctors YouTube channel. This page documents that professional collaboration. It is not legal advice and the videos are not a substitute for individual clinical evaluation.
What this page covers
- The clinical purpose of identifying spinal injuries during the acute window after a motor vehicle collision
- The role of objective imaging in distinguishing structural lesions from non-structural pain disorders
- Standards-based personal injury workup applied in a corrective care setting
- How peer collaboration and continuing education shape clinical reasoning in post-MVC care
About the collaboration
Jeffrey Cronk, DC, JD founded Smart Injury Doctors, an educational program for clinicians who manage spinal injury cases. The program emphasizes objective documentation, standardized injury workups, motion segment integrity assessment, and the interface between clinical findings and medico-legal reporting.
Clear Life Scoliosis and Chiropractic Center is a CLEAR Institute corrective care clinic in Charlotte, North Carolina. The clinic's personal injury work draws on the radiographic and biomechanical methods Dr. Dick uses in scoliosis reduction and extends them into the post-collision setting, where structural change, dynamic instability, and pre-existing degeneration all have to be sorted out.
The three videos below were recorded for the Smart Injury Doctors channel between 2022 and 2023. They sit alongside Dr. Dick's peer-reviewed research and attorney continuing legal education as part of the broader professional record.
Video one: Identifying injuries in the acute window
Clinical context. One of the recurring problems in post-collision care is the gap between when a patient is structurally injured and when they are clinically diagnosed. The acute window, roughly the first six to twelve weeks after the crash, is when objective findings are most retrievable: tissue response is still active, dynamic instability has not yet been masked by guarding patterns, and imaging can be paired with examination findings before chronic adaptation sets in.
The argument in this video is that a standards-based workup applied early, rather than reactively years later, changes both the clinical trajectory and the medico-legal record. Corrective care measures applied in the acute phase are not a guarantee of outcome, but they are a different proposition than trying to reverse-engineer a problem decades down the line.
Video two: Getting to the root cause through imaging
Clinical context. A patient presented with a long history of pain that had been worked up repeatedly over the years, ending in non-structural diagnoses including depression and various pain disorder labels. Imaging review identified a structural finding from an old injury that had not been characterized in the prior workups. The point of the case is not that imaging always reframes a diagnosis. It is that when the structural substrate has not been adequately characterized, the differential is incomplete, and patients can spend years cycling through interventions aimed at the wrong problem.
This is also where stress radiography and post-collision imaging logic become relevant. Static films answer one question. Dynamic imaging answers a different one. Both have a place, and neither replaces clinical reasoning.
Interview with Jeffrey Cronk DC JD on the Smart Injury Doctors series
Context. Split-format interview segment with Jeffrey Cronk, DC, JD, founder of Smart Injury Doctors, discussing the role of consistent, standards-based clinical workups in personal injury practice. The point underneath the conversation is that documentation discipline supports both clinical continuity across providers and the medico-legal record. Ad hoc documentation does neither well.
Where this work connects to published research
The clinical reasoning in these videos draws on the same radiographic and biomechanical methods documented in Dr. Dick's peer-reviewed case work:
- Refractory lumbar pain following motor vehicle accident in a geriatric patient
- Retrospective cross-sectional analysis of abnormal cervical mechanics in patients with scoliosis
- Radiographic sagittal alignment and neurological changes following conservative cervical rehabilitation
- Radiographic sagittal alignment and kinetic chain alterations in geriatric patients with scoliosis
- Full peer-reviewed research listing
About Jeffrey Cronk, DC, JD
Jeffrey Cronk holds doctorates in chiropractic and law. He founded Smart Injury Doctors as an educational platform for clinicians managing spinal injury cases and has published and lectured on motion segment integrity, the Connective Tissue Injury Severity Index, and the interface between clinical findings and personal injury documentation. His work is influential in the field of post-collision spinal injury evaluation.
What this page can and cannot claim
This page documents a professional collaboration and continuing education relationship. It is not a clinical guideline. The videos are educational and reflect Dr. Dick's clinical perspective and the framework taught through the Smart Injury Doctors program. Individual outcomes vary. Imaging findings, dynamic instability, and structural lesions require individual evaluation. Nothing on this page is legal advice.
Related clinical resources
- Car accident chiropractor in Charlotte
- Whiplash injury treatment
- Personal injury chiropractor
- Herniated disc after a car accident
- The three main injuries a spine can have after a car accident
- Imaging after a car accident
- Stress X-rays after a car accident
- Medical documentation after a car accident
- Delayed symptoms after a car accident
- Pre-existing degeneration vs new injury vs aggravation
- Personal injury Q and A
- Continuing legal education for attorneys
- Attorney referral
- Personal injury research hub