Therapeutic Massage
In therapeutic massage both you and your therapist have a shared goal of achieving structural changes within the body.
A therapeutic massage means you present to the therapist with a specific complaint, for instance, pain in your hip, tight shoulders, or a spasm in your lower back (or even all three). We then follows four steps:
Assess your current condition. This will include taking a history, asking how long have you experienced the pain, whether the onset was sudden, how you experience the pain, etc. The therapist will also observe the way you move, test your range of motion, and feel the tissue during the treatment for consistency and texture.
Propose a plan. Once we has a good idea of your condition, he can propose an approach to treatment. This might be a simple as focusing on your area of complaint — shoulders, lower back and right hip — instead of trying to do a full-body massage during one session. We might recommend a series of sessions at recommended intervals and indicate the kind of progress you can expect during that time. We can recommend other ways of treating the area, such as using heat, ice, hydrotherapy, or stretches. If appropriate, we might refer you to another health professional for further assessment and treatment.
Perform the therapy. This is the actual massage, or treatment, based on the assessment and the plan you have agreed to.
Evaluate the outcome. At the end of the treatment, we review the results. Is the pain less? Is there more mobility in the joint? Has your posture improved? On the basis of the results, we can recommend additional sessions and the frequency. If you come every week, for instance, you'll see quicker progress than if you wait two or three weeks between sessions. An evaluation will take place at the end of each session to determine the continued course of therapy.