Understanding Pain

    

GENERAL BENEFITS OF MASSAGE

 


* Massage relaxes muscle contractions, spasms, and relieves general body tension.

* Massage helps overcome harmful fatigue resulting from strenuous exercise programs and can compensate, at least in part for the lack of exercise and muscular contractions in persons who because of injury, illness, or age, are forced to remain inactive.

* Massage increases the blood supply and nutrients to muscles without adding to their load of toxic lactic acid produced through voluntary muscle contraction.

* Massage helps increase the extraction (via the kidneys) of fluids, nitrogen, inorganic phosphorous, and salts from normally healthy individuals.

* Massage disperses the edema following injury to ligaments and tendons, lessens pain, tissue damage, and helps facilitate greater movement.

* Massage helps empty the larger bodily ducts and channels, and so decreases the auto intoxication resulting from inflammation or constipation; thus aiding the body’s immune system.

* Massage improves muscle tone and helps prevents or delay muscular atrophy resulting from forced inactivity.

* Massage may have a sedative, stimulating, or even an exhausting effect on the nervous system, depending on the type and length of massage treatment given.

* Massage strokes can separate muscle fibers, undoing or preventing the formation of adhesions, spasms, and trigger points.
   
 

 

FACTS / STUDIES

STUDIES:

~German emperor Frederick II, took a number of newborns from their mothers and gave them to nurses who fed them but did not cuddle or talk to them. All of the babies died before they could talk. Fredrick concluded "They could not live without petting."

~In the early 1990's, Romania, thousands of infants were put in orphanages, they were left in their cribs for two years, all alone. They were found to be severely impaired.

~Duke Professor Saul Schanberg found that rat pups separated from their parents for 45 minutes underwent major internal changes including a large drop in growth hormones. Injections of growth hormones didn't help. But when someone stroked them with a wet paintbrush-- mimicking their mothers tongue--the hormone levels went back up.

INTERESTING FACTS ON TOUCH:

~Touch is the first sense to develop in humans, and may be the last to fade

~there are approximately 5 million touch receptors in our skin-- 3000 in a finger tip

~a touch of any kind can reduce the heart rate and lower blood pressure

~touch stimulates the release of endorphins (the body's natural pain killers) which is why a mother's hug for a child's skinned knee can literally make it better

~people with eating disorders who receive massage three time a day for ten day's, gain weight faster and got out of the hospital six days sooner than those who don't

~elderly people who massage surrogate grandchildren report higher-esteem and better moods

~massage before an athletic event, makes the athlete more flexible, enhanced speed and power, and less prone to injury

* One in five Americans have had a massage from a massage therapist in the past five years and 13% report receiving one in the past year. This is up 8% from 1997.

* Today, there are more than 60,000 Nationally Certified practitioners that serve millions of consumers.

* Nationally Certified practitioners provide expertise in various areas of therapeutic massage and body work; Nationally Certified practitioners provide expertise in various areas of therapeutic massager and body work, including Swedish massage, shiatsu, polarity therapy, Rolfing®, Trager® techniques, reflexology, neuromuscular therapy and many more.

* In 1996, massage therapy and bodywork was officially offered for the first time as a core medical service in the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta. At the Games, Nationally Certified practitioners were providing key medical services.

* Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia now regulate the practice of therapeutic massage and bodywork. Of those, twenty-five states, in addition to the District of Columbia, now use the NCBTMB examination as meeting (in part or in whole) the requirements of regulation.

* NCBTMB currently has over 600 Approved Providers of Continuing Education.

* Consumers spend between $2 and $4 billion dollars annually on visits to massage and bodywork practitioners, totaling approximately 75 million visits each year.

* The three most often cited reasons for getting a therapeutic massage are relaxation (27%), relief of muscle soreness, stiffness or spasm (13%), and stress reduction (10%).

* Health insurers are increasingly expanding coverage to include alternative medicines. In addition, several healthcare network providers use NCBTMB to check the National Certification status of the practitioner.

* Fifty-four percent of primary care physicians and family practitioners say they would encourage their patients to pursue massage therapy as a complement to medical treatment.

* Massage therapy accounts for 18% of the 425 million visits made to alternative healthcare providers each year.

* In 1999, 52% of American adults thought of massage as "therapeutic," which is up 47% from 1997.

* An estimated 20 million Americans receive massage therapy and bodywork each year, according to the National Institute of Health (NIH).

* Approximately 50,000 massage and bodywork practitioners provide 45 million one-hour therapy sessions each year.

* Two thirds of Americans have tried at least one form of alternative therapy or treatment for medical conditions.

* Massage therapy is the third most commonly used form of alternative medicine in the U.S., having been tried by 35% of Americans.

* Women are more likely than men to have tried alternative treatment.

* Forty-two percent of Americans have used some type of alternative care in the past.

* Americans make more visits to see alternative therapists than to see primary-care physicians, spending $21.2 billion.

* The number of massage practitioners in the U.S. is between 120,000 and 160,000.

* Massage and bodywork therapy is sought out by a large number of people in age brackets: 18-24 (22%); 25-34 (31%); 35-44 (25%); 45-54 (22%); 55-64 (19%); and over 65 (9%).

* The most important driver to try an alternative treatment is a recommendation from a friend or family member, which leads 62% of their patients to these providers.


MASSAGE FOR SPORT EVENTS, TRAINING, AND REHABILITATION

Research in sports medicine is revealing more information about the effects of exercise and injury on the human body and its systems. As a result, sports massage is becoming more accepted by athletes, sports medicine specialists, and coaches as a means of enhancing performance, aiding recovery and preventing injuries.

Sports massage has become more popular and necessary as the number of people participating in sport and fitness activities increases. The physical demands placed on professional athletes or "weekend warriors" lead to a wide variety of muscular and soft tissue injuries that can be effectively treated with proper massage techniques.