The Town Chiropractor has built a system of developing its multidisciplinary professionals and building their competencies expediently. my clinics, it’s a dynamic team ap-proach that resonates with me. I’ve managed to accelerate my education, ramp up my assessment and treatment skills, and by tapping into all of The Town Chiropractor’s resources and expertise, I’m making a significant difference in patient outcomes.” Dr. Kayla Mayberry agrees. “I met Daniel two years before my graduation from CMCC,” says the new associate for the Saint John and St. Stephen clinics. “He explained what the com-pany is about and I hopped on board.” But first, she took an opportunity to travel to Tanzania with the Global Peace Network, applying her chiropractic skills to help men, women and children in the rural part of that country for three months. “Daniel and Erik encouraged me to volunteer,” she affirms. Mayberry now enjoys her part as the travelling practitioner for a burgeoning patient load on Grand Manan island, a 90-minute ferry ride away on the Bay of Fundy. “I was booked the first week-end I went there,” says Mayberry. “It’s a lobster-catching community, so there are a variety of repetitive injury prob-lems associated with living on a boat for long periods, throwing out and hauling in heavy traps. These folks are 18 Canadian Chiropractor February 2018 The Town Chiropractor thrives on offering new chiropractors a ton of respect and equality. very appreciative that I come here to treat their conditions. That’s tremen-dously satisfying for me.” Klein, a candidate for the 2017 top 50 CEOs in Atlantic Canada, empha-sizes that the corporate culture at The Town Chiropractor thrives on offering new chiropractors a ton of respect and equality. “The average grad earns less than $25,000 their first year out of college, according to practice management experts,” he cites. “At Town Chiroprac-tor our first-year associates earn an average of $60,000. Our chiropractors currently see approximately 120 new patients per month. Our organization has gross billings of $2 million, we serve 5,000 people a year and we per-form approximately 20,000 treatments annually. That’s great experience to bank on. But our challenge remains that we still don’t have enough staff to cover all the demand our company generates.” Hoyt, who also works as a vice-pres-ident in a major insurance firm when she’s not out on the riding circuit, ex-presses gratitude to Klein. Last Octo-ber, she rode in the The All-American Quarter Horse Congress held in Ohio, one of world’s largest single breed-horse shows. She placed in two top-10 events: in the 2-year-old Non-Pro Hunter division and the Under Saddle Limited and Open Division. “I couldn’t have done that without the treatments I receive from Dr. Klein,” she says. “I call him my miracle worker.” You can find more practice profile articles online at www.canadianchiropractor.ca. www.canadianchiropractor.ca