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Research
in massage therapy has been ongoing
for more than 120 years!
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An
increasing number of research studies show massage reduces heart
rate, lowers blood pressure, increases blood circulation and
lymph flow, relaxes muscles, improves range of motion, and
increases endorphins (enhancing medical treatment). Although
therapeutic massage does not increase muscle strength, it can
stimulate weak, inactive muscles and, thus, partially compensate
for the lack of exercise and inactivity resulting from illness
or injury. It also can hasten and lead to a more complete
recovery from exercise or injury. |
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According AMTA, massage helps both physically and mentally.
"Often times people are stressed in our culture. Stress-related disorders make up between 80-and-90 percent of the ailments that bring people to family-practice physicians. What they require is someone to listen, someone to touch them, someone to care. That does not exist in modern medicine.
One of the complaints heard frequently is that physicians don't touch their patients any more. Touch just isn't there. Years ago massage was a big part of nursing. There was so much care, so much touch, so much goodness conveyed through massage. Now nurses for the most part are as busy as physicians. They're writing charts, dealing with insurance notes, they're doing procedures and often there is no room for massage any more.
I believe massage therapy is absolutely key in the healing process not only in the hospital environment but because it relieves stress, it is obviously foundational in the healing process any time and anywhere."
Joan Borysenko
Massage Journal Interview, Fall 1999 |
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