Dr. Justin Biggs opened Accident & Injury Chiropractic Clinic of Southern Utah on South Main in Cedar City around 2014. The name is unusually long for a chiropractic office and is a good example of how a name can do real work — it tells the patient base what the clinic is for, and it makes the practice harder for a national chain to colonize in search results, since franchises rarely commit to a name that specific.
What “accident and injury” means in practice
A meaningful share of patient volume is post-collision care: auto accidents on I-15 and Highway 14, work injuries on Cedar City’s construction and agricultural sites, acute soft-tissue trauma referred in by attorneys after a wreck. The clinic also handles standard chiropractic — general adjustments, rehab plans, ongoing maintenance — but the trauma orientation is the differentiator. Patients arrive through three roughly distinct channels: walk-in, attorney referral, and athletic referral, the last of those tied to Dr. Biggs’s sports-medicine background.
A solo Cedar City practice
The clinic is single-location and single-provider, which keeps the operating model simple. Cedar City has seen national chiropractic chains push into similar storefronts in the broader Mountain West, and a clearly local, owner-named practice with a specific clinical identity is the kind of candidate a register like this can actually verify and stand behind. The site, Google Business profile, and Yelp listing all carry consistent identity information.
Where this fits in Iron County
Cedar City does not yet have the dense field of trauma-rehab specialists that a larger metro produces. For a Cedar City driver who got rear-ended on Main and a Cedar City framer who threw out his back at a job site, the clinic functions as the kind of accessible mid-acuity care that fills a real gap. Locally owned, named principal, distinct clinical focus, decade-plus tenure on the same block — that is a clean Iron County candidate for the 435.