Medical massage
Medical massage is outcome-based massage, primarily the application of specific targeted techniques to the problem the patient presents with a diagnosis or assessment, and is administered after a thorough evaluation by the medical massage therapist, with specific outcomes being the basis for treatment. Medical massage is distinguished from relaxation or spa massage by its focus on addressing specific conditions and treatment outcomes. It is also referred to as clinical or treatment massage.
It is based on the premise that the therapist has advanced training and experience in both assessment and treatment. Medical massage can be applied for conditions such as low back pain, neck pain, repetitive strain injuries, and other musculoskeletal issues.
History
The first written records of massage therapy in Ayurvedic range between 1,500 and 500 B.C.E., but research suggests the practice of these techniques centuries before. Meditation, aromatherapy, and other techniques were evident for thousands of years in traditional Indian medicine.Massage has been used as a medical treatment dating back to the Chinese over 5,000 years ago. More recently professor Silas Weir Mitchell, a neurologist in Philadelphia is thought to be the first to bring massage to the attention of the US medical community. In 1884, Douglas Graham, MD of Boston Massachusetts wrote A Practical Treatise on Massage which focuses on the treatment of specific diseases and disorders by using massage as a treatment. In 1885, Harvey Kellogg published the classic textbook The Art of Massage, Its Physiological Effects and Therapeutic Actions. During the nineteenth century, massage in Europe was described in the medical literature and was taught at institutions and also offered by lay practitioners. In 1886, William Murrell, an English Physician wrote a book Massage as a Mode of Treatment. In Russia, M.Y. Mudrov, MD used massage and movement exercises in his medical practice with adults and later applied it to the development of children.Massage has been popular as a form of medical treatment in Russia since the late 1700s.
The American Medical Massage Association and The United States Medical Massage Association followed with similar goals of lifting the profession to higher standards and, in turn, giving patients a better outcome. The AMMA has worked with the standard medical community to bring massage therapy into the mainstream; they have done this through a board of advisers that includes massage therapists, physicians, chiropractors etc.
Much of the present explosion of information in the injury-rehabilitation field can be credited to the work of Janet G Travell.