Ask any experienced personal injury attorney what single factor most affects their ability to settle a soft-tissue case favorably, and many will say the same thing: documentation quality. Specifically, chiropractic SOAP notes.
Yet most chiropractors were never trained to write notes for a legal audience. And most attorneys don’t know enough about clinical documentation to know what to ask for until a case is already in trouble.
This guide bridges that gap. It explains exactly what SOAP notes are, what makes PI-quality SOAP notes different from standard clinical notes, what adjusters and opposing counsel look for, and the specific documentation elements that support strong demands and protect case value.
SOAP is an acronym for the four sections of a clinical visit note:
SOAP notes are the legal and medical record of every patient visit. They are the core document an attorney will rely on to describe the nature, severity, and duration of their client’s injuries.
What SOAP notes are not: a billing vehicle. Notes that appear to be written to justify a specific CPT code rather than to document clinical reality are a red flag for adjusters and create serious problems in litigation.
In a standard chiropractic practice, SOAP notes serve a clinical function — they help the provider track patient progress and communicate with other treating providers. In a PI case, they serve an additional legal function: they are evidence.
Specifically, PI-quality SOAP notes must:
When these elements are present in every visit note, an attorney can build a demand letter that is difficult to pick apart. When they’re absent, the insurer’s adjuster can credibly argue the injuries were minor, pre-existing, or not caused by the accident.
Many chiropractors write the subjective section as: “Patient reports 7/10 pain in lower back.”
That’s inadequate for a PI case. A strong subjective section includes:
Symptom description: Location, quality (sharp, dull, burning, aching), intensity (numeric scale), frequency, duration, and aggravating and relieving factors.
Functional impact: Direct quotes from the patient about how the symptoms affect their life. “Patient reports inability to sit at desk for more than 20 minutes without significant pain, limiting her work capacity” is far more compelling than a pain score.
Change since last visit: Was this visit better or worse than the last? This shows the trajectory of the injury.
Activities of daily living: Sleep disturbance, driving limitations, childcare difficulties, recreational limitations. These humanize the injury in a way that matters at settlement.
Example of a strong subjective entry:
“Patient reports 6/10 cervical and 7/10 lumbar pain today, unchanged from last visit. Pain is described as constant aching with sharp exacerbations on rotation. Patient states she was unable to return to her job as a dental hygienist this week due to inability to maintain neck flexion for extended periods. Reports significant sleep disturbance — waking 3–4 times per night due to cervical pain. Denied any improvement in symptoms since last visit.”
This is where most clinical documentation falls short and most legal cases are won or lost. The objective section must contain measured, reproducible findings — not impressions.
Range of Motion: Use a goniometer and document specific measurements in degrees for every relevant plane of motion. Compare to established normal values.
This is defensible. “Limited cervical range of motion” is not.
Orthopedic and Neurological Tests: Document every test performed, the finding (positive/negative), and what it indicates. Examples:
Palpation Findings: Document the exact spinal levels and severity. “Moderate to severe paraspinal muscle spasm at C4–C6 and L3–S1, moderate tenderness on palpation at bilateral SI joints” is specific and documentable.
Vital Signs / Functional Measures: If you use any validated functional outcome measures (Oswestry Disability Index, Neck Disability Index), document scores at each visit — they provide objective tracking of functional improvement or plateau.
The assessment is where you connect the dots clinically and translate your findings into diagnoses.
List all active diagnoses with ICD-10 codes. In PI cases, include the external cause code (the V-code for the type of accident) — this is important for establishing the injury record.
Example assessment:
“1. Cervicogenic headache (G44.309) secondary to cervical whiplash (S13.4XXA) 2. Lumbar sprain/strain (S39.012A) 3. Radiculopathy, cervical region (M54.12) — External cause: Motor vehicle accident, initial encounter (V49.9XXA)”
If the patient has a prior history of chiropractic care or a pre-existing condition, document clearly how the current presentation differs from or represents an exacerbation of that prior condition. Failing to address pre-existing conditions in the assessment is a serious documentation error that adjusters will exploit.
Document exactly what treatment was provided — each modality, the specific areas treated, and the duration. Then state the clinical rationale for continuing care.
“Chiropractic manipulation performed at C4–C6, C7/T1, L3–L5, L5/S1. Myofascial release to bilateral cervical paraspinal musculature, 10 minutes. Electrical stimulation to lumbar region, 15 minutes. Ice applied post-treatment. Plan: Continue twice-weekly treatment schedule for 4 additional weeks based on significant objective findings without plateau. Patient demonstrating gradual improvement in ROM but significant residual deficits remain. Reassess in 4 weeks for treatment frequency adjustment.”
SOAP notes are necessary but not sufficient. Attorneys also need:
A comprehensive narrative written at the first visit that documents: the mechanism of injury in detail, the complete presenting complaint, all objective findings at intake, the initial diagnosis and treatment plan, and the prognosis. This document establishes the baseline from which all subsequent progress is measured.
Interval narrative reports that summarize: patient progress (or lack thereof) since intake, current objective findings compared to baseline, functional status, treatment changes, and prognosis update. These are the foundation of a demand letter’s medical summary section.
Written when treatment concludes or when the patient reaches maximum medical improvement (MMI). Should include: date MMI reached or anticipated, current functional status, final diagnosis and outcome, any permanent restrictions or residual symptoms, and a prognosis statement.
Insurance adjusters are trained to find documentation weaknesses that justify lower settlement offers. Common red flags they target:
Templated, identical notes across visits. If every visit note has exactly the same objective findings, they argue the chiropractor is documenting by rote rather than actually examining the patient.
Gap in treatment. If a patient misses several weeks of appointments and no clinical reason is documented, adjusters argue the patient wasn’t that injured.
No objective findings supporting subjective complaints. If a patient reports 9/10 pain but ROM is nearly normal and all orthopedic tests are negative, the documentation doesn’t support the claimed severity.
Treatment without documented response. Notes that don’t show whether the patient is improving, plateauing, or worsening make it impossible to justify the treatment course.
Causation language missing. Notes that document the current condition without connecting it to the accident can be used to argue the condition is unrelated or pre-existing.
Use this before submitting records to an attorney:
When chiropractors document at this standard, attorneys close better cases. When attorneys understand what to ask for, they get documentation that actually supports their demands. That alignment is what AttorneyChiro is built on.
AttorneyChiro’s platform ensures every referring attorney receives progress notes and narrative reports on a structured schedule — in exactly the format they need. Request a demo to see it in action.
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