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Evidence based massage therapy group

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Evidence based massage therapy group

This page is no longer maintained.
Please visit us at:

https://www.facebook.com/massage.evidence

http://facebook.com/massage.research

http://twitter.com/massagetherapy

This community fosters healthy exchange of knowledge and information and encourages the practice of evidence-based massage therapy based on credible research. Persons interested in higher education in this area might also benefit from being a member.

Website: https://www.facebook.com/massage.evidence
Location: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Members: 210
Latest Activity: Mar 4, 2015

Articles and other resources

This page is no longer maintained.
Please visit us at:

https://www.facebook.com/massage.evidence

http://facebook.com/massage.research

http://twitter.com/massagetherapy

Sicily statement on evidence-based practice - click here for full text

Introduction to evidence-based complementary medicine


Teaching first-year medical students to apply evidence-based practices to patient care.
This is a great article on implementation - click here for PDF

How to establish and encourage EBP - slide show

Giving the best to massage therapy patients - Evidence based massage therapy practice

Changing Times - Massage Therapy in primary health care

Evidence-Based Indications for Therapeutic Massage -abstract

Working in partnership to develop evidence-based practice within the massage profession - abstract

https://www.facebook.com/massage.evidence

http://facebook.com/massage.research

http://twitter.com/massagetherapy

Discussion Forum

An eBook on Writing a Case Report 2 Replies

 I hope someone on this site is thinking of writing up a case report!If so, I wrote a wee eBook on what I went through, which also has resources which might help someone:…Continue

Tags: ebook, research, reports, case

Started by Vlad. Last reply by Vlad Apr 14, 2012.

A nice article on pain and massage 1 Reply

If you needed research evidence to accept massage as beneficial, how about this article?  Using…Continue

Started by Daniel Cohen. Last reply by Rick Johnson Jul 24, 2011.

Obstacles 20 Replies

What do you think is the major obstacle preventing massage therapy from becoming evidence based?

Started by BH. Last reply by Truc Dinh Dec 11, 2010.

Definately worth a read 3 Replies

http://www.ttem.org/forum/index.php?topic=1807.10See what you think ?Continue

Started by Stephen Jeffrey. Last reply by Jason Erickson Sep 13, 2010.

Evidence-based massage therapy resources

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Comment Wall

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Comment by Rene Roberto on August 15, 2009 at 7:48pm
Yes, indeed, women are well represented here as well, which is good to keep the balance. Sorry, I had not seen the previous pages because I just joined.
Comment by Robin Byler Thomas on August 15, 2009 at 9:51am
By a quick count, women make up 40% of this forum.
Comment by Jan Schwartz on August 15, 2009 at 9:43am
Go back a couple of pages Rene--women have commented and contributed.
And will continue to do so, here and elsewhere, with regard to EBP and research.
Comment by Noel Norwick on August 15, 2009 at 9:26am
Rene: Re making sales pitches to corporations, you might find it helpful to watch the hour ten minutes Columbia profession's presentation regarding how to best influence others: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1tyUQb9IUQw
Comment by Rene Roberto on August 14, 2009 at 9:02pm
Thanks again Chris. I found the articles you mentions very useful and to the point. That was the kind of solid study I have been after.

Noel, thanks for the pubmed nih site hint. The NIH is a terrific resource for EB CAM studies.

I find it interesting that mostly guys are interested in EB studies. Is that because our female colleagues prefer the more intuitive path, rather? I have nothing against the use of intuition, and try to use it whenever it manifests itself. But I can not make a sales pitch to a corporation based on it, right?
Comment by Noel Norwick on August 13, 2009 at 12:29pm
Christopher: Thanks for letting us know about Google's Beta testing of the "Scholar" search option. While articles may be older, as someone who doesn't have an academic account, I get free access to articles via: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/
Comment by Christopher A. Moyer on August 13, 2009 at 11:21am
Rene -

To the best of my knowledge, you probably won't find any chair massage studies in the major medical journals, yet.

In addition to the citations Bodhi gave you, I seem to recall another study of chair massage for nurses at their workplace - let me see if I can find it....

Hmm, I didn't see the one I was looking for, but I did find a few others! Here:

http://www.ajan.com.au/Vol23/Vol23.4-4.pdf

Also:

Chair massage for carers in an acute cancer hospital
European Journal of Oncology Nursing, Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 167-179
P.Mackereth, P.Sylt, A.Weinberg, G.Campbell

and

The effect of chair massage on stress perception of hospital bedside nurses
Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies, Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 335-342
M. Brennan, R. DeBate

It used to be hard for people not currently at university to search for such articles, but no longer. Go to google.com, and at the top, from the "more" menu, select "Scholar". Then type in what you want, such as workplace chair massage.

One more suggestion - these papers are not chair-massage specific, but these may also be applicable for your purposes. I have co-authored two different review articles that attempt to summarize a range of massage therapy effects. You can view them here:

http://www.anatomyfacts.com/Research/Massage%20Journal%20Club/January07/Moyer.pdf

and

http://ecam.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/4/1/23

You will need Adobe Reader (a free program you might already have) to view those files.

-CM
Comment by Rene Roberto on August 13, 2009 at 6:00am
Thank you for your responses Chris and Bodhi.
Chris: I am looking for all studies that show improvement in any of the areas you mentioned, stress, absenteism, pain relief, productivity etc...I intend to market my services to offices in my area, but want to do it "evidence based".

Bodhi, your articles hit the right spot (ACHI like they say in China!). I will look for them. Thanks a lot! Do you know of anything published in the more mainline medical journals that you know of? Like Lancet, JAMA, New England J. M. etc..?
Rene.

Rene.
Comment by Christopher A. Moyer on August 12, 2009 at 7:27am
Hi Rene.

Can you be any more specific about your interest? It will help us direct you to the information you seek.

There are only likely to be a few clinical trials of workplace chair massage, and they might not assess the specific outcomes you are interested in. Are you interested in productivity? Satisfaction? Anxiety? Absenteeism? Pain reduction?

-CM
Comment by Rene Roberto on August 12, 2009 at 6:20am
I am looking for clinical trials about corporate chair massage effects on workers.
Can anyone steer me in the right direction??
Thanks,
Rene.
 

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