If you work in chiropractic care, ergonomics, spinal health, or workplace wellness — and you write about how the physical environment affects the body — the Trucomfort blog is looking for contributors with your expertise. We publish original, evidence-grounded content about sleep posture, home workspace design, spinal health, and the relationship between furniture and physical wellbeing. It’s a niche that sits precisely at the intersection of your clinical knowledge and our audience’s purchasing decisions.
This page is for chiropractors, ergonomists, occupational therapists, and workspace wellness professionals. For broader sleep health, massage therapy, or general wellness topics, visit the Trucomfort Write for Us page for complete submission guidelines.
Why This Audience Needs Your Expertise
Trucomfort readers are investing in their bedroom and home environment — bed frames, Murphy beds, massage chairs. Many of them are doing so because they’re dealing with back pain, poor sleep posture, desk-related tension, or the physical consequences of a sedentary work-from-home lifestyle. They’re not casually browsing. They’re looking for credible guidance from professionals who understand how the body interacts with furniture, sleeping surfaces, and seated positions.
That’s the gap your expertise fills — and it’s a gap our general wellness content cannot fill with the same authority that a working chiropractor or ergonomics specialist brings.
Topics We’re Actively Looking For
Spinal Health & Sleep Posture
- How sleep posture affects spinal alignment and what good sleep ergonomics actually looks like
- The relationship between bed frame height, mattress firmness, and lumbar support during sleep
- Side sleeping, back sleeping, stomach sleeping — what the spinal health evidence says
- How a worn or inadequate sleep surface contributes to morning back pain and daytime fatigue
- Pillow positioning for cervical spine alignment — a chiropractor’s practical guide
- What patients should look for in a bed frame from a spinal health perspective
Home Workspace Ergonomics & Posture
- The most common remote work posture mistakes and how to correct them without expensive equipment
- Desk setup ergonomics for people working from home — monitor height, chair position, lumbar support
- How prolonged sitting affects the spine, hip flexors, and posterior chain — and what to do about it
- Standing desk usage — the evidence on alternating sitting and standing and what it actually achieves
- Designing a home office that supports spinal health over the long term
- Micro-break protocols for remote workers — movement, stretching, and desk posture resets
Massage, Manual Therapy & Home Recovery
- What chiropractic care and massage therapy share — and where they complement each other
- How home massage chairs fit into a patient’s maintenance and recovery plan between clinic visits
- The clinical case for heat therapy and compression in managing chronic soft-tissue tension
- What patients with specific conditions — disc herniation, scoliosis, stenosis — should know before using a massage chair
- The role of passive recovery tools in a comprehensive musculoskeletal management plan
Chronic Pain, Fatigue & the Home Environment
- How the physical design of a home affects chronic pain management over time
- Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and the role of sleep quality in symptom management
- What patients with lower back pain should consider when buying bedroom furniture
- How desk workers can build a home environment that supports musculoskeletal health long-term
- The intersection of sleep deprivation and pain sensitization — a clinical perspective
What You Get as a Contributor
- A do-follow backlink to your clinic, practice website, or professional profile — one contextual link in the article and one in your author bio
- Your credentials featured prominently in your author bio on every article you publish
- Exposure to an audience of home wellness buyers who are often actively dealing with the exact conditions you treat
- Long-term organic visibility on a niche platform with consistent traffic in the sleep, recovery, and home furniture space
- A credible publishing platform that matches the evidence standard of your clinical practice
Submission Requirements
- Length: 1,000 words minimum — 1,200 to 1,800 preferred for clinical or research-based pieces
- Originality: 100% original, not published or submitted elsewhere
- Evidence standard: Claims supported by peer-reviewed research, clinical guidelines, or documented professional practice
- Format: Google Doc with editor access, or Word document. Clear H2/H3 structure required
- Author bio: 50–80 words with your name, credentials (degree, designation, clinic affiliation), and one link
- Images: Suggest at least one royalty-free image. Anatomical diagrams or posture illustrations are welcome if you hold the rights
- No advertorials: Editorial content only — pieces written to promote a clinic, product, or service will not be published
Ready to Pitch Your Article?
Send a 3–5 sentence pitch with your proposed topic, your clinical angle, and a brief note on your credentials and background. We review every pitch personally and respond within 5–7 business days.
📩 Submit Your Pitch →The Submission Process
- Pitch first — Email sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com with your topic, your angle, and a brief note about your professional background and credentials.
- We confirm fit — Our editorial team reviews every pitch and responds within 5–7 business days. If it’s a match, we confirm and share any specific editorial direction.
- Write and submit — Send your completed article as a Google Doc with editor access, your author bio, image suggestions, and preferred backlink URL.
- Editorial review — Light edits may be made for clarity, formatting, or SEO. You’ll be notified before anything goes live.
- Publication — Your article is published on the Trucomfort blog and we send you the live URL to share with your own network, patients, and audience.
Who We’re Looking For
- Chiropractors (DC) and chiropractic researchers with a clinical writing practice
- Ergonomics specialists and certified ergonomists (CPE) with workplace or home office focus
- Occupational therapists specializing in home environment modification or workplace wellness
- Physiotherapists with a musculoskeletal, postural, or chronic pain specialization
- Spinal health researchers and physical medicine professionals
- Workplace wellness consultants writing about sedentary work and home office health
- Health and wellness writers with a deep, clinically grounded specialization in posture or spinal health
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I reference my clinic or link to my practice website?
Yes — in your author bio with one link. One additional contextual do-follow link is permitted within the article body, pointing to a relevant, non-competing resource.
Can I write about contraindications for specific furniture or devices?
Yes. Clinical caution articles — “who should and shouldn’t use a massage chair”, “sleep positions to avoid with lumbar disc issues” — are valuable and welcome. Frame them as educational guidance, not clinical advice directed at specific patients.
Can I submit a co-authored article with a colleague?
Yes. Both authors receive bio credit. Clarify in your pitch that the article is co-authored and include both bios with your final submission.
How long after approval until publication?
Typically 7–14 business days after your draft is approved and any editorial revisions are finalized.
Contact the Editorial Team
Questions before you pitch? Reach the Trucomfort editorial team at sales@trucomfortmassagechairs.com or call +1 (418) 717-0912.
For the full guest post guidelines covering sleep health, massage therapy, sports recovery, and bedroom design, visit the Trucomfort Write for Us page.
Share Your Spinal Health & Ergonomics Expertise With Our Readers
Chiropractors, ergonomists, occupational therapists, and spinal health writers — if you have clinical knowledge about posture, sleep ergonomics, and the home environment, we want to publish it.
View the Full Submission Guidelines →