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Dare to Ask: We sense tension over massage therapy

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

Why aren’t massage therapists recognized as having any value in the health industry? I get snubbed by chiropractors, physical therapists and occupational therapists when I inquire about employment.

Mary, 25, Springfield, Vt.

Replies 

Well, as a PT major, a lot of people asked me if I would be getting into massage therapy. I wanted no part of it because of the lingering stereotype of prostitution. Actually, where I live there is a massage parlor where you can pay extra money to have the therapists massage you topless, all nude, etc.

Joe B., 23, Scranton, Penn.

The majority of people I massaged were rude, snobby jerks who didn’t tip well and wouldn’t care if they heard my fingers breaking as long as they got their ultra-deep massage. As for healthcare professionals, to them you are competition.

Sara B., 37, Atlanta

“Massage” still connotes “prostitution” to a lot of people, so these OT/PT types and chiropractors may buy into the stereotype, in addition to being the sorts of “contamination snobs” so desperate for respect from anyone with an “M.D.” after their name that they feel a need to find someone to dump on the way M.D.s dump on them.

Ann, Missouri

Expert says

We can’t tell you how many rude massage clients, “contamination snobs” or prostitutes there are in America (or how much they earn), but we can say that U.S. Department of Labor figures show there are at least 118,000 massage therapists who average about $40,000 a year.

(Hey Gainesville, did you know you have the fourth-highest concentration of MTs in the country? Maybe there’s another column to do on why that is . . .)

Jeers that MTs are nothing but glorified, shall we say, “givers” are mostly in the past, said Cherie Sohnen-Moe, a former massage therapist and co-author of The Ethics of Touch.

“Disrespect doesn’t occur as much,” she said. “It’s not that massage isn’t considered a value – if anything, it’s that others [in health care] might not want to share clients. Still, a lot of chiropractors, for example, have MTs working in their offices now.”

Some OTs or PTs might perceive massage therapists as being less-trained, however.

“Take a physical therapist, that’s four to six years of school, while in some places with massage, it’s three months. The PT might think, ‘I had to do so much, why doesn’t everyone else?’ ”

Massage programs are requiring more instruction, however, with the national standard now at least 500 hours of training, Sohnen-Moe said.

MTs also have well-established standards and ethics, including having clients sign informed consent sheets, discussing verbally which body areas will be worked on and obtaining permission before touching certain areas, such as women’s pectoral muscles.

“I’ve even gone some places where the massage therapist avoids the glutes. Well, I travel a lot and am stuck in airplane seats. And I’ll be like, ‘Excuse me, my glute’s not a sexual area, it’s a major muscle, work it please.’ . . . After all, working on the glutes can be a life-changing experience!”

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