The Quackers Neck Disclaimer
We built this site to cut through the noise. You want serious relief. You want zero quackery. You want measurable results. Delivering that requires strict editorial standards. It also requires absolute clarity about what we do and what we do not do.
Read this page carefully. It outlines the boundaries of our content, how we fund our research, and where your responsibility begins.
1. Informational Purposes Only. Not Medical Advice.
We analyze chiropractic methods. We review cervical traction devices. We break down the differences between a diversified adjustment and the activator method. We do this to arm you with high-resolution information before you walk into a clinic.
We do not treat patients. We do not diagnose spinal conditions.
The content on Quackers Neck exists strictly for educational and informational purposes. It is never a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you suffer from a locked cervical joint, radiating nerve pain, or a suspected C5-C6 disc issue, close your laptop. Call a licensed chiropractor. Consult an orthopedic specialist. Book a physical therapy evaluation.
Never disregard professional medical advice because of something you read on this website. Never delay seeking treatment based on our editorial opinions. Your spine requires hands-on, localized clinical assessment. A website cannot provide that.
2. The Reality of Clinical Research and Accuracy
We dig deep. We pull data from state chiropractic boards. We track shifts in physical therapy protocols. We interview practitioners who have spent decades in the field.
Medical consensus shifts. A technique considered standard practice today gets updated tomorrow. We commit to updating our core guides regularly. We correct errors the moment we verify them. However, older articles reflect the clinical reality of the day they were published.
We make no guarantees regarding the absolute completeness or real-time accuracy of every statement on this site. Verify our claims with your own primary care provider before starting a new stretching routine or purchasing a corrective device.
3. How We Fund This Site
Running an independent editorial operation requires capital. We buy the ergonomic pillows we test. We pay for access to medical research databases. We maintain the servers.
To fund this work, Quackers Neck participates in affiliate marketing programs. If you click a link for a posture corrector, a neck hammock, or a specific ergonomic chair and make a purchase, we earn a small commission. This costs you nothing extra.
That commission buys exactly zero influence over our editorial process.
If a highly-rated traction device feels like a medieval torture trap during our testing phase, we say so. We reject far more products than we recommend. Our loyalty remains entirely with our readers. If we lose your trust, we lose our business. We refuse to compromise our integrity for a quick payout.
4. External Links and Third-Party Domains
We link out to external resources constantly. We point you toward state licensing boards. We highlight local health fairs. We link to specific chiropractic clinics in Columbus and other regions when discussing practice models.
We verify these links at the time of publication. We do not control what happens on those domains afterward.
A reputable clinic website gets sold. A research paper moves behind a paywall. A local wellness workshop changes its registration policies. Click external links with common sense. We hold no liability for the content, privacy practices, or medical claims made by third-party websites. Once you leave Quackers Neck, you operate under the terms and policies of that specific domain.
5. Your Responsibility
You came here for measurable results. We provide the research to help you ask better questions at your next chiropractic consultation. We help you identify red flags. We help you demand better care.
You hold the ultimate responsibility for your health decisions. Use our guides as a starting point. Take that knowledge to a licensed professional. Do the work.