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Decision points

Massage in a biopsychosocial model

[reposted from Massage in a biopsychosocial model (#29/31)]

 

 


Psychosocial and cognitive approaches don't require that you become a clinical psychologist but that you have a broad concept of the influence of those factors and that you account for them in your encounters with your patients. Know the literature and be able to give management advice based on evidence. When people come to see you they want a plan. Have a plan that is defensible and that works toward their goals. Address concerns, fear avoidance, other stress, and unhelpful beliefs with compassion, understanding, empathy, and informed knowledge.

Understanding why people hurt is part of our professional responsibility and should change most everything we do on a daily basis away from traditional methods and towards methods defensible with modern science.--Jason Silvernail accessed 5 August 2011

 

Since I'm advocating massage in a biopsychosocial model, it's my job to connect the dots and explain what I mean by that.

A biopsychosocial model of health and illness is one that takes into account the role of biology (and other sciences), psychological factors, and sociocultural factors, as well as the interactions among those different factors, in seeking to understand what health and illness really are.

An example of a biological factor in health could be increased cortisol in the bloodstream in response to chronic stress. The interaction of that biological factor with the increased daily stress in modern society would be an example of interactions among biological factors and sociocultural factors.

An example of a psychological factor in health could be a man who is less likely to seek professional treatment for pain than a woman is, because of his perception that stoically enduring pain is what men do in the society he grew up and lives in. The increased structural damage that can occur as a result of ignoring symptoms and delaying treatment is an example of the interactions among psychological factors and biological factors.

An example of a social factor in health could be the relative stigmatization of mental or behavioral illness, as compared to how more clearly structural conditions are regarded. This stigmatization can drive psychological conditions underground--say, for example, if someone did not get needed psychological treatment because they didn't want it to show up in their medical record. That would be an example of interactions among sociocultural factors and psychological factors.

Biopsychosocial massage is client-centered. That means that the psychological and social factors in the client's unique experience, as well as the universal biological factors we are all subject to, is the center of where we focus our attention and caring. It doesn't mean that we accept everything in someone else's experience is literally true. It does mean that we recognize that, for them it feels true, and for that reason alone, it is important in where we meet the client in the therapeutic encounter.

Biopsychosocial massage welcomes self-expression and the art of massage. It is clear, however, that sometimes our need for self-expression can come into conflict with clients' immediate healthcare needs, and--when that happens--we recognize that, in order to act as healthcare professionals, our ethical fiduciary duty is to put the clients' needs first, ahead of ours if necessary.

Biopsychosocial massage is wholistic, integrative, and evidence-based. That means that it does not draw upon supernatural explanations of mechanisms, and it builds upon foundational knowledge in the sciences to evaluate and validate the evidence for or against particular claims of effectiveness or mechanisms.

Since our encounters with clients will always run ahead of the available high-quality evidence, we don't limit ourselves only to what has been rigorously validated by studies and nothing else. We take our professional experience into account, and we actively seek to understand and incorporate the clients' preferences, whenever possible, in treatment. But in all these cases, in developing our approach to caring for the client, we remain clear on what is evidence, what is speculation, what is science, what is art, what is literal, and what is metaphor.

Understanding the material physical universe around us, and the centuries of cumulative human knowledge about that universe, give us powerful tools to draw upon. That understanding, combined with the caring that characterizes so many people who choose to go into massage as a career, is the heart of biopsychosocial massage.

Neil deGrasse Tyson sums it up almost perfectly:

I am driven by two main philosophies, know more today about the world than I knew yesterday. And lessen the suffering of others. You'd be surprised how far that gets you.

--Neil deGrasse Tyson

 

That quotation demonstrates the core of massage in a biopsychosocial model.


Source: http://healthskills.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/biopsychosocial.jpg accessed 7 August 2012

Who owns BPSM?

That's an excellent question.

Diane Jacobs, talking about dermoneuromodulation (DNM)--a practice that she has developed, and that we'll talk more about here later--answered that intellectual property question first, and better than I could have come up with off the top of my head.

When asked:

What's a good name for working top down and bottom up?

 

she answered:

Dermoneuromodulation. :)smiley

It covers the manual territory from skin cell to self of self and leaves out the mesoderm entirely. It is not a copyright term.

Anyone can use it, to describe what they do, manually, if they want. This made-up word is not copyright. I give it away. Please take it. Use it to get away from words like "fascia" and "muscles" and "joints" and "bones" and "ligaments" and "tendons".

 

In the same way as Diane practices with regard to her development of DNM, I don't claim any restrictions on anyone's access to use of the term through copyright or ownership over the term "biopsychsocial massage (BPSM)".

I give it away to the community to use freely, in the same spirit of open access and Creative Commons licensing that POEM is founded on.

There is only one condition of usage--you cannot apply the term to something it is not, any more than someone can make a dog into a cat, just by calling it one.

Source: Left, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8c/Poligraf_Poligrafovich.JPG; Right, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Feral_cat_Virginia_crop.jpg accessed 18 November 2012

 

In a similar way, you can't make non-BPSM practices into BPSM simply by slapping that label on them.

Diane explains that, although she gives the term away freely, that

It should contain only nervous system considerations though, because really, when push comes to shove, only the nervous system can respond (short term, OR, and ESPECIALLY, long term) to what we "do" to another person, manually. Of that I'm convinced.

 

Similarly, if you're not practicing biopsychosocial massage, the term does not apply to what you actually are doing.

You have every right under principles of freedom of conscience to reject classical Newtonian physics, for example, and to say that it does not apply to the work that you are doing. But that claim is inconsistent with the principles of BPSM, and so that inconsistency means, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that your practice is not a biopsychosocial massage practice. Which is fine in itself; you are entitled to practice any way you want to, subject to professional ethics and to regulations in your jurisdiction. All it really means is that you don't get to label it something that it is not--no more, no less.

There is a Cambodian saying that men are like diamonds and women are like silk--if you drop them in the mud, you can wash the diamond and it's as clean as it ever was, but the silk is stained forever.

«បុរសជាមាសទឹកដប់ ទោះធ្លាក់ចូលភក់ ហើយលើកមកវិញ ក៏នៅតែជាមាសទឹកដប់ដដែល តែនារីវិញ ប្រៀបបាននឹងកំណាត់សំពត់ស បើកាលណាធ្លាក់ចូលភក់ជ្រាំហើយ ទោះខំប្រឹងបោកគក់លាងសម្អាតយ៉ាងណា ក៏មិនដូចដើមដែរ» (courtesy of Frank Smith)

 

Source: Left, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8f/Apollo_synthetic_diamond.jpg; Right, "Weathered Memories/2008" by Joan H. Calloway ("wishes, true and kind") http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Q8uC-dZACLA/TJ7nFt-t2cI/AAAAAAAACaY/eDRBb_GeD38/s400/DSCN0956.JPG accessed 18 November 2012

 

Let's put aside for the moment the blatant sexism in that proverb ("dropping them in the mud" is a metaphor for their being sexually active, and this is the classic embodiment of the double standard against women in so many traditional societies), and see if there is any useful imagery there for us to communicate a distinction in a totally different domain, without being insulting to more than half of the population.

The term "biopsychosocial massage" refers to massage practiced in an evidence-based, science-based, client-centered way, that understands health, wellness, and disease in terms of natural (not supernatural) processes in the material physical universe among biological, psychological, and sociocultural aspects of life, as well as their interactions and the emergent effects that arise from them.

Anyone who practices massage in this way is practicing BPSM.

If that term is consistently applied to only those practices, then it is a clean and brilliant diamond that clients and other massage stakeholders can use as a baseline to understand exactly what BPSM has to offer.

If the term is (figuratively) dropped in the mud by applying it to anything and everything, no matter whether or not it is consistent with the principles of BPSM, then--like the silk--it is stained forever, and it becomes useless for clients and other massage stakeholders to use as a guide to understand what BPSM has to offer.

So I give the terms "biopsychosocial massage" and "BPSM" to the community to use freely, on the one condition that they not be diluted by applying them as mere buzzwords to massage or other practices that are not massage practiced in an evidence-based, science-based, client-centered way, that understands health, wellness, and disease in terms of natural (not supernatural) processes in the material physical universe among biological, psychological, and sociocultural aspects of life, as well as their interactions and the emergent effects that arise from them.

(Not yet clear on what that means in actual practice? That's ok; there's a great deal of rich material there to explore in depth. We're going to spend some quality time connecting the dots, and translating them into what they mean for actual practice. I just want to get that general principle out there; now that it is, we can do some real work on establishing what it means in practice.)

So the answer to the question in the post title, "Who owns BPSM?" is: It is entrusted to the responsible and sustainable stewardship of the massage community.

 

cheers, to Diane Jacobs!

 


UPDATE, 18 November 2012, 10:57 AM PT:

Gayla Coughlin points out that some of my statements above, as written, are unclear in what they mean for actual practice, and might result in outcomes that I don't want.

I thank her for giving me the opportunity to correct my inaccuracies, and to get closer to my intended outcome.

I am thus taking out a Creative Commons license on biopsychosocial massage (BPSM), and here are the conditions attached to that license.

The particular form of the Creative Commons license that most suits my intent for this work is Attribution-ShareAlike CC BY-SA.

Their blurb explains:

This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms. This license is often compared to “copyleft” free and open source software licenses. All new works based on yours will carry the same license, so any derivatives will also allow commercial use. This is the license used by Wikipedia, and is recommended for materials that would benefit from incorporating content from Wikipedia and similarly licensed projects.

--"About the Licenses", http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ accessed 18 November 2012

 

What this means is that you can build on, develop, and grow biopsychosocial massage, but only on the condition that you share your work with the community in the same way ("license their new creations under the identical terms")--you cannot take the work that I and others have done on biopsychosocial massage, and trademark or copyright it for yourself. This license thus protects biopsychosocial massage for use by the entire community, rather than having someone seize it away from us in a proprietary way.

The Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) page explains it in this way:

You are free:

  • to Remix — to adapt the work
  • to make commercial use of the work

This means it is approved for Free Cultural Works

Under the following conditions:

  • Attribution You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work).

  • Share Alike — If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.

With the understanding that:

  • Waiver — Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holder.
  • Public Domain — Where the work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license.
  • Other Rights — In no way are any of the following rights affected by the license:
    • Your fair dealing or fair use rights, or other applicable copyright exceptions and limitations;
    • The author's moral rights;
    • Rights other persons may have either in the work itself or in how the work is used, such as publicity or privacy rights.
  • Notice — For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work. The best way to do this is with a link to this web page.

--Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) page accessed 18 November 2012

 

If my statements above sounded like I objected to commercial use on anyone's part, then that was due to my inaccuracy--I have no objection to anyone earning a living by teaching classes, writing books, or anything like that, as long as you honor the moral rights that attach to my Creative Commons licensing of biopsychosocial massage. And by "mere buzzwords", I was not objecting to using the term to market your works based on biopsychosocial massage. I specifically meant slapping the label on practices where it does not apply, in order to market something that is incompatible at its core with biopsychosocial massage.

By "moral rights", I specifically mean that I do not want anyone to use the label "biopsychosocial massage" to endorse practices that are anti-scientific or pseudoscientific, or that are not client-centered. Those violate the spirit of biopsychosocial massage, and are an infringement of my moral right to delineate a set of massage practices and theory that are consistent and compatible with modern science and with evidence in the material physical world.

If you respect that moral right, then you are free to build on and develop biopsychosocial massage for non-commercial or commercial uses, but you cannot take it away from the community by trademarking or copyrighting it for yourself.

So I believe that the conditions of this license protect my intent to release it to the responsible and sustainable stewardship of the community, at the same time that it protects the content from being distorted by misuse of the label to apply to something that contradicts the heart of biopsychosocial massage.

 

cheers, to Gayla Coughlin!

 

Creative Commons License
Biopsychosocial massage (BPSM) by Ravensara S. Travillian is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at http://poem-massage.org/content/biopsychosocial-massage-bpsm-new-lineage.

Biopsychosocial massage (BPSM): A new lineage

There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

--Charles Darwin, Origin of Species, close of first edition, 1859

 

Source: Left: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/18/Charles_Darwin_by_G._Richmond.png; Right: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a0/George_Richmond_-_Emma_Darwin_-_1840.jpg accessed 17 November 2012

 

Charles Darwin, whose biological observations led to the development of evolutionary theory, and his wife Emma loved each other very much.

Their many letters to each other over the years (preserved online in the Darwin Correspondence Project) stand as a testament to how much they thought, cared, and worried about each other.

In one letter, written around February 1839, Emma expresses her wish as a faithful believer, but at the same time, also admits to her doubts in her own hope:

The state of mind that I wish to preserve with respect to you, is to feel that while you are acting conscientiously & sincerely wishing, & trying to learn the truth, you cannot be wrong; but there are some reasons that force themselves upon me & prevent my being always able to give myself this comfort.

--Darwin Correspondence Project, Darwin, Emma to Darwin, Charles [c. Feb 1839] accessed 17 November 2012

 

She wants to feel secure that, if she (or he, or anyone) is really trying diligently and sincerely to learn what is true, that that effort guarantees that she cannot possibly be mistaken about what she is learning. The reason she is so concerned about this is that she was devoutly religious, and she knew that Charles had doubts about religion.

To be impossible to be wrong, through sheer effort and sincerity, is a lovely wish--and yet, in the same sentence, she admits to her beloved husband that even she herself cannot always keep up that belief.

She was right to be concerned about that issue--the history of science at that time in England contains many examples of geologists, paleontologists, biologists, and other scientists who set out on a journey to find evidence in the material physical natural world that proved the stories in the Bible to be literally true.

For example, if the story of Noah's Ark and the Flood were literally true, you would find evidence of it in the layers of rock in that part of the world. The scientists who set out to find it discovered that that evidence is not there, but other evidence, showing that other things happened, is indeed there.

The scientists who set out to demonstrate that the earth is literally only a bit more than 6000 years old demonstrated instead that they would have to reject all the other multiple sources of repeatable, verifiable evidence that showed the earth to be much older than that.

Darwin himself demonstrated that--rather than the Genesis creation story that species were created one time in their present and unchanging form--species actually change over time to better adapt to the environments they find themselves in.

When the evidence these scientists found contradicted what they wanted it to say about the literal truth of the Bible, they faced a test of their own moral character in deciding what to do next about that fact:

  1. They could ignore the evidence, pretend the discovery never happened, and never face the meanings of the contradictions between the evidence and what they believed, or

    Source: http://thinkingmomsrevolution.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/fingers-in-ears.jpg accessed 17 November 2012
     
  2. They could double-down on their belief, holding on even tighter to it while rejecting the reality of the material physical evidence, or

    Source: http://www.examiner.com/images/blog/wysiwyg/image/bad_poker.jpg accessed 17 November 2012
     
  3. They could accept the reality of the material physical evidence, revising their beliefs as needed to resolve the contradictions between the beliefs and the evidence.

    Source: http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-LSEZYAmp3P0/UEKl9Td19sI/AAAAAAAACKE/m0nhbygv1nU/s1600/alone.jpg accessed 17 November 2012

 

Some of the most solid scientific knowledge that we rely on every day came from people who had the courage to face the implications for their beliefs that the evidence presented them, and the integrity to not turn away from or deny the contradictions, but rather to engage with them.

To take a more contemporary example of that same spirit, this quotation from Julie Onofrio is, for me, the essence of the courageous engagement that we so urgently need to participate in if we really want to become a profession:

Having an open forum and getting some help in analyzing research is really needed in our profession. Yes, I have to say it disturbs me when the researchers say things like traditional modalities don't work--it's like a slap in the face to all who are doing energy work, or reiki, or Rolfing, and having results and success. It's very hard not to take it personally, but also to set emotions aside and remain in communication. But that is why I support it. I want to learn more and to support the profession in understanding research.

 

This willingness to remain engaged, even when it's difficult because it contradicts what we've been taught, is nothing short of admirable. Julie is showing the courage of facing difficult dilemmas that evidence presents us about how massage actually works, and she is actively engaging with that process, and in that, she is going the extra mile.

Like Emma and Charles Darwin, most MTs are good, decent, caring, and loving people, who want to understand the truth.

If just wanting it sincerely, and working hard at it, were enough by themselves to avoid error, most of us would be there already.

Sadly, in this material physical universe, those good intentions are not sufficient to help us to be correct.

 

 


The National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (NCBTMB) is an independent non-profit organization that offers national certification in massage and bodywork.

This national certification functions as a path to initial licensure (sometimes the only path) for MTs in some states.

The Board has undertaken a major revamp of policies and procedures, one which is causing a great deal of disruption among nationally certified MTs and continuing education providers.

Its CEO, Mike Williams, states that the purpose and effects of this change are

streamlined online processes, enhanced communications, and improved programs that elevate the profession and better serve the public.

--NCBTMB front page accessed 17 November 2012

 

Some of those changes may well have that effect--I am not personally nationally certified, and I have not yet examined the changes in depth as other MTs and bloggers such as Laura Allen have.

But in the FAQ about the new procedures for approving continuing education providers, there is--for me--an absolute deal-killer.

 

Q: Will NCBTMB continue to accept alternative courses like energy work, aromatherapy, animal massage, etc?

A: Yes. Massage therapy is part of the holistic profession as are several other modalities and techniques. NCB will continue to accept modalities and techniques that can be legally practiced by a massage therapist without another healthcare provider, (i.e., DC, MD, PT) present. As long as the technique or modality can be shown to be embedded in the lineage of massage, it will be accepted. This means that if the core information of the technique or modality can be referenced as a derivative of another technique or modality that is within the massage therapy scope of practice it will be accepted.

--NCBTMB Approved Providers FAQ accessed 17 November 2012

 

 

The argument over the relationship between massage and "energy work" is nothing new.

In the early 1990s, when I was in massage school, the NCBTMB was developing the first national certification exam--the National Certification Examination for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (NCETMB). Eventually, as a result of consumer pressure, they were forced to offer an energy-free alternative, the National Certification Examination for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (NCETM), for those MTs who did not want to be coerced into an anti-evidential belief system as the price of their professional training and licensure.

Although the argument is nothing new, there was a fresh opportunity to do something innovative here among the other disruptive changes--but NCBTMB did not take that opportunity.

Instead, they opted to permit teaching any information (which includes misinformation and malinformation) as approved continuing education, as long that that can be shown to be "embedded in the lineage of massage". Considering the long history of "massage myths", documented by Laura Allen (here and here), Lee Kalpin, Paul Ingraham, and many others, it is clear that just because an idea has been embedded in massage, even for a very long time, that does not mean the idea is correct.

NCBTMB had an opportunity to stand up for the principle that, in the therapeutic encounter, a professional should provide only validated warranted (justified or justifiable) high-quality information to the client.

They did not take the opportunity to stand up for that principle, and as a result of that decision, I cannot participate in their new process. I will not go on to apply for national certification as a practitioner, nor will I become an approved continuing education provider under those standards.

I regret those facts, as I consider them massive missed opportunities. But I cannot do it, because our first principles on these matters are so far apart as to be irreconcilable.

Don't misunderstand me here--I am positive that the NCBTMB members are well-intentioned, and that they wanted to do the right thing. I genuinely believe that they were attempting to have the best of both worlds for the benefit of all massage stakeholders, and to not hurt anyone's feelings.

I respect them as the kind, caring, motivated, passionate people that they clearly are.

If that, by itself, were enough to be right, as Emma Darwin wished, we would not have to have this very serious and difficult discussion.

But evidence doesn't work like that--you can't pick and choose which evidence you accept, and which you reject. Either you accept all the evidence, and you go courageously wherever those implications take you, or you just don't accept the evidence.

If they are going to accept massage's traditional explanation of "energy work"--no matter how many times that explanation has been shown by the evidence to be mythical--as validated approved continuing education with their official imprimatur, then they are not preparing MTs who are taught that explanation for modern translational science. Holding on to old ideas even after they have been disproven is an active obstacle to understanding these new developments.

The environment of massage is exhibiting selection pressures toward a type of massage that is integrated with validated high-quality information, and that prepares MTs for understanding advances in neuroscience, cognitive science, endocrinology, and pain science, and translating that understanding into clinical practices that are client-centered and effective.

As a direct response of those pressures, biopsychosocial massage is breaking off from the main lineage of massage to provide a new massage lineage that is fully consistent with those principles.

Source: Darwin's first documented sketch of an evolutionary tree, around 1837, from his notebooks http://www.sciencebuzz.org/sites/default/files/images/myers_darwin_tree.png accessed 17 November 2012

 

 


You can consider this the official birth announcement of a new lineage of massage.

Biopsychosocial massage (BPSM) is massage understood and practiced in a biopsychosocial model. It understands massage, health, wellness, and illness, and the knowledge bases underpinning those concepts in an evidence-based, natural (meaning, not supernatural), organic way that draws on what we know about biology and other natural sciences, psychology, sociocultural aspects of being human, and the emergent effects that arise from interactions among these various factors.

Psychosocial and cognitive approaches don't require that you become a clinical psychologist but that you have a broad concept of the influence of those factors and that you account for them in your encounters with your patients. Know the literature and be able to give management advice based on evidence. When people come to see you they want a plan. Have a plan that is defensible and that works toward their goals. Address concerns, fear avoidance, other stress, and unhelpful beliefs with compassion, understanding, empathy, and informed knowledge.

Understanding why people hurt is part of our professional responsibility and should change most everything we do on a daily basis away from traditional methods and towards methods defensible with modern science.--Jason Silvernail accessed 5 August 2011

 

An example of a biological factor in health could be increased cortisol in the bloodstream in response to chronic stress. The interaction of that biological factor with the increased daily stress in modern society would be an example of interactions among biological factors and sociocultural factors.

An example of a psychological factor in health could be a man who is less likely to seek professional treatment for pain than a woman is, because of his perception that stoically enduring pain is what men do in the society he grew up and lives in. The increased structural damage that can occur as a result of ignoring symptoms and delaying treatment is an example of the interactions among psychological factors and biological factors.

An example of a social factor in health could be the relative stigmatization of mental or behavioral illness, as compared to how more clearly structural conditions are regarded. This stigmatization can drive psychological conditions underground--say, for example, if someone did not get needed psychological treatment because they didn't want it to show up in their medical record. That would be an example of interactions among sociocultural factors and psychological factors.

Biopsychosocial massage is client-centered. That means that the psychological and social factors in the client's unique experience, as well as the universal biological factors we are all subject to, is the center of where we focus our attention and caring. It doesn't mean that we accept everything in someone else's experience is literally true. It does mean that we recognize that, for them it feels true, and for that reason alone, it is important in where we meet the client in the therapeutic encounter.

Biopsychosocial massage welcomes self-expression and the art of massage. It is clear, however, that sometimes our need for self-expression can come into conflict with clients' immediate healthcare needs, and--when that happens--we recognize that, in order to act as healthcare professionals, our ethical fiduciary duty is to put the clients' needs first, ahead of ours if necessary.

Biopsychosocial massage is wholistic, integrative, and evidence-based. That means that it does not draw upon supernatural explanations of mechanisms, and it builds upon foundational knowledge in the sciences to evaluate and validate the evidence for or against particular claims of effectiveness or mechanisms.

That means that we understand and practice it in a holistic, complementary, and integrative way, integrated with other domains of human knowledge and with the natural universe we find ourselves in, rather than silo'ed off in an alternative universe that denies material physical reality, and isolates us away from members of the client-centered biomedical healthcare team.

If a proposed explanation for an effect requires us, for example, to reject physics, as the explanation of "energy work" embedded in massage tradition does, then we face that contradiction head on, and we work to resolve it. If that means updating old beliefs in the light of new evidence, then that is the consequence of practicing biopsychosocial massage.

Michael Hamm is another contemporary example of courageous engagement, facing the evidence head-on and seeking to better understand. I'm paraphrasing his quote here, and I trust that he'll correct me if I've gotten it wrong. If I can find the original quote, I'll replace the paraphrase, but it was something to this effect:

I understand and accept that the traditional anatomical explanation behind craniosacral therapy doesn't hold up in light of the evidence. At the same time, I can't deny that I feel something when I am doing that work, something that I can't explain. I want to better understand what is going on when I do that work.

 

In the absence of clear evidence of what is exactly going on, this suspension of previous belief that has been disproven (and not yet replaced) is totally in line with the principles of BPSM. We don't have to always know everything; we just have to know what we do know, what we don't know, and how strong the evidence is behind our knowledge.

Since our encounters with clients will always run ahead of the available high-quality evidence, we don't limit ourselves only to what has been rigorously validated by studies and nothing else. We take our professional experience into account, and we actively seek to understand and incorporate the clients' preferences, whenever possible, in treatment. But in all these cases, in developing our approach to caring for the client, we remain clear on what is evidence, what is speculation, what is science, what is art, what is literal, and what is metaphor.

Understanding the material physical universe around us, and the centuries of cumulative human knowledge about that universe, give us powerful tools to draw upon. That understanding, combined with the caring that characterizes so many people who choose to go into massage as a career, is the heart of biopsychosocial massage.

Neil deGrasse Tyson sums it up almost perfectly:

I am driven by two main philosophies, know more today about the world than I knew yesterday. And lessen the suffering of others. You'd be surprised how far that gets you.

--Neil deGrasse Tyson

 

That quotation demonstrates the core of massage in a biopsychosocial model.


Source: http://healthskills.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/biopsychosocial.jpg accessed 7 August 2012

 

Over time, here at POEM, we will be following that evidence where it leads, and courageously engaging with the meanings that it shows for the practice of massage therapy. I expect intense, passionate, and fruitful discussions here over the next few years.

 


UPDATE, 18 November 2012, 11:01 AM PT:

Creative Commons License
Biopsychosocial massage (BPSM) by Ravensara S. Travillian is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at http://poem-massage.org/content/biopsychosocial-massage-bpsm-new-lineage.

Commitment in the therapeutic encounter: You can have anything you want, but you can't have everything you want

It's a lovely idea to think that there are no limits, and that we can have everything we want.

Certainly, a massive part of the US advertising industry is dedicated to selling that dream, precisely because it's such an appealing one. There is no shortage of people who will pay good money for the hope of living without limits.

In the realm of dreams and ideas, there may well be practically no limits to what we can imagine. But the material physical world imposes constraints, or limits, on what matter and energy are capable of, and what they cannot do.

We don't understand everything about why matter and energy behave the way they do, but over the centuries, we've observed them in enough different situations that we're pretty good at describing how they behave in those situations. It's very much like the situation with gravity--there are several different and mutually exclusive proposals for what gravity is, and why it works the way it does.

But we don't need to wait until those questions are decided to be able to predict how gravity will behave well enough for hundreds of thousands of airplanes worldwide to take off and land safely (for the most part) every day. We can predict its behavior so accurately that in 1970, when the Apollo 13 spacecraft suffered an explosion and fire on the way to the moon--an explosion which left the spacecraft badly damaged, and low on fuel to get back to earth, and oxygen for the astronauts to breathe--ground control was able, on the fly, to improvise a plan that took advantage of the Moon's gravitational field to act as a "gravity slingshot" to propel the spacecraft and all 3 astronauts safely back home.

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/fd/Gravity_Assist_analogy_Kohlhase_Hovland.jpg accessed 7 October 2012

 

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fc/Apollo_13_timeline.svg accessed 7 October 2012

 

The same is true for matter and energy. These behaviors are so reliable that their descriptions are called "laws of physics"--metaphorically, it's as if they "know" they have to "obey" certain "laws", so they always do so.

Of course, science never says anything is definitively, 100% certain. Some things are very uncertain, and they're likely to be revised as we learn more about them.

Other things, while not 100% certain, can be almost 99.9999% certain--so the effect is as though it's perfectly certain, even though there's always that tiny 0.0001% chance it will be changed someday in light of new evidence, if that new evidence ever does show up on the scene.

The limits of the material physical world around us have been observed, described, and discussed for thousands of years, and, because they are so reliable, you can see, many times, the same description of the consequences of those laws of physics being discovered independently in different cultures far away from each other in time and space as ancient Greece and medieval India.

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/89/Panini%2C_the_great_Sanskrit_grammarian..jpg accessed 7 October 2012

 

One of those consequences, borne out time and time again by the behavior of matter and energy, has been described as the "principle of non-contradiction"--that, in the material physical universe, something cannot both exist and not-exist at the same time, or that something cannot be both true and false at the same time.

Did that statement make you think of Schrödinger's Cat? If so, then that's an excellent question you raise!

At first glance, it seems as though the cat might provide an exception to that rule: the cat is both dead and alive at the same time in this thought experiment.

Yet it doesn't really, and here's why.

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/91/Schrodingers_cat.svg accessed 7 October 2012

 

It is typical of these cases that an indeterminacy originally restricted to the atomic domain becomes transformed into macroscopic indeterminacy, which can then be resolved by direct observation. That prevents us from so naively accepting as valid a "blurred model" for representing reality. In itself, it would not embody anything unclear or contradictory. There is a difference between a shaky or out-of-focus photograph and a snapshot of clouds and fog banks.--Wikipedia, "Schrödinger's cat" accessed 7 October 2012

—Erwin Schrödinger, Die gegenwärtige Situation in der Quantenmechanik (The present situation in quantum mechanics), Naturwissenschaften
(translated by John D. Trimmer in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society)
 

 

When we're talking about the cat being simultaneously dead and alive, we are talking about a phenomenon at only the subatomic level of organization--what Schrödinger called "an indeterminacy originally restricted to the atomic domain".

When we're engaging with clients in a therapeutic encounter, however, we are not engaging solely on a subatomic level--we're engaging at many levels, up to and including the organism level: Schrödinger's "macroscopic" level.

To confuse the subatomic level of organization with the organism level is to make the same mistake as to assume that--because both sodium and chloride as elements are immediately and painfully deadly to humans at the atomic level, then their compound--salt--also shares those properties. (Although it is true that too much salt over too many years can wreck your health, but only in a very different way from elemental sodium and elemental chlorine.)

To confuse those levels of organization with each other is to "naively accept...as valid a 'blurred model' for representing reality". At the subatomic level, without an observer, we can use words or images like the previous one to imagine a cat that is simultaneously dead and alive.

In our macroscopic material physical reality, the moment an observer looks at the cat to see what is going on, the subatomic waveform collapses--it definitively commits to one state or the other, but not to both at the same time--and we have either a dead cat, or a live cat, but never both simultaneously.

Unlike the poor cat (sometimes), the law of non-contradiction is still alive and well at the organismal level of material physical reality, where our therapeutic encounters with our clients take place.

Our metaphorical "waveforms" also are forced to collapse in one direction ot the other at this point, but--unlike the electron--at least we get to choose which of the two mutually-exclusive options we commit ourselves to.

This principle shines a spotlight on where a number of the most heated battles in massage's culture wars are currently taking place.

We have to decide one way or the other on the following question--because of the law of non-contradiction, we can't just say "both", and hand-wave our way out of the profound philosophical and scientific questions it raises.

As a first principle, do we accept or reject the reality of the material physical universe?

 

We have the freedom to choose either answer, but--no matter how much we may want it--we can't have it both ways.

The answer we choose to that question will determine what we have to offer to clients, as well as how we relate to one another.

This, in turn, will set in motion what history will tell about how our future of massage turned out.

Sometimes evidence shows that the old ways actually are the best

While cherry-picking--the act of suppressing evidence that doesn't support our own particular biases--is something to be avoided, berry-picking, on the other hand--carrying out our searches for information in a way that is not strictly linear and that incorporates cognitive questions, by allowing those searches to evolve and change in response to what we initially come across--is not only to be encouraged, but can be absolutely delightful in the unexpected directions it leads us.

This morning, berry-picking took me in a most unexpected direction. On the way to looking up something else, I came across this:

Risks of consuming fermented foods

Alaska has witnessed a steady increase of cases of botulism since 1985. It has more cases of botulism than any other state in the United States of America. This is caused by the traditional Eskimo practice of allowing animal products such as whole fish, fish heads, walrus, sea lion, and whale flippers, beaver tails, seal oil, birds, etc., to ferment for an extended period of time before being consumed. The risk is exacerbated when a plastic container is used for this purpose instead of the old-fashioned, traditional method, a grass-lined hole, as the botulinum bacteria thrive in the anaerobic conditions created by the air-tight enclosure in plastic.--Wikipedia, "Fermentation: Risks of consuming fermented foods accessed 3 October 2012

 


Slightly off-topic, but interesting (I think!), in a berry-picking way, since we care about calling people by the names they want to be called: Did you notice that the paragraph used the word "Eskimo", and did that perhaps seem a little strange to you, because you've heard that you shouldn't use the term "Eskimo" when you mean the Inuit people, since the word is derogatory or pejorative or insulting?

You're not wrong, if you remember hearing that--the word "Eskimo" probably does, historically, have connotations that are belitting and insulting, and Native American and First Nations people have spoken out explicitly and firmly against the use of the word.

At the same time, there is no good inclusive replacement term that includes the Yup'ik peoples of Alaska--if you just say "Inuit" instead of "Eskimo", that's fine if you mean only Inuit people and no one else.

But if you mean Inuit people together with Yup'ik people, then there really isn't a well-known acceptable term that means both. So often, you will see Alaskan Native American (more so) and Canadian and Greenlandic First Nations and Inuit people (less so, or maybe even not at all, per Lee Kalpin's comment following this post) compromising, and using the term in order to be inclusive, despite the connotations that go along with the word.

 


What's happening in Alaska?

Alaska has witnessed a steady increase of cases of botulism since 1985. It has more cases of botulism than any other state in the United States of America.--Wikipedia, "Fermentation: Risks of consuming fermented foods accessed 3 October 2012

 

Botulism is a condition that paralyzes people and animals who eat food contaminated with botulin toxin, or who have an open wound through which the bacteria that produce the toxin (Clostridium botulinum) can enter the body. C. botulinum is an obligate anaerobic bacterium, meaning that it is obliged to grow in an environment without air--oxygen is deadly to it.

VERY IMPORTANT WARNING

This is why you absolutely never, under any conditions at all, give honey to babies under 1 year old--they don't yet have the immunity to fight off the bacteria that produce the toxin.

After 1 year of age and older, people can fight off the actual C. botulinum bacteria themselves, so the bacteria can't gain a foothold in their systems to begin pumping out the toxin.

But if the neurotoxic poison produced by that bacteria has already contaminated the food somehow--as opposed to the bacteria themselves--then that toxin can produce botulism in anyone.

 

Facial paralysis which spreads through the body is a typical symptom of botulism; very bad cases can actually cause death by paralyzing the muscles needed to breathe.

The 14-year-old in these pictures from Wikipedia show the paralysis that's typical of severe botulism. Although he appears dead, he was actually fully conscious, yet unable to move. His eyelids were drooping and his eyes were paralyzed, and the pupils were fixed and dilated. We hope he made a full recovery--Wikipedia doesn't tell us how his story turned out--but even if he did, it would require a long, slow, difficult path to rehabilitation.

 

"A 14-year-old with botulism. Note the bilateral total ophthalmoplegia [paralyzed eyes] with ptosis [drooping eyelids] in the left image and the dilated, fixed pupils in the right image. This child was fully conscious."

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b4/Botulism1and2.JPG accessed 3 October 2012

 

From 1950 to 1997, 105 confirmed outbreaks of foodborne botulism involving 214 persons occurred in Alaska (there were no confirmed cases during 1947-1949)...All cases occurred in Alaska Natives. The average annual incidence among Alaska Natives increased from 3.5 cases/100,000 population during 1950-1954 to 10.7 cases/100,000 during 1995-1997 [in other words, right about 3 times as many cases as you'd expect, based on history].--State of Alaska Public Health Epidemiology Report: Botulism in Alaska--A Guide for Physicians and Health Care Providers, 1998 Update accessed 3 October 2012

 

Source: State of Alaska Public Health Epidemiology Report: Botulism in Alaska--A Guide for Physicians and Health Care Providers, 1998 Update http://www.epi.hss.state.ak.us/pubs/botulism/fig_1.gif accessed 3 October 2012

 

The Rose Urban Rural Exchange, in its own words, "aims to strengthen relationships between urban and rural Alaskans by building mutual respect and understanding, and fostering a statewide sense of community through cross-cultural immersion.".

They have a website where they promote cross-cultural understanding by presenting pictures and reports of daily life, festivals, and other events.

In a post, "The Best of the Whale", one of their writers, Bogdan, presents pictures from Ilisagvik Inupiaq Culture Camp, where elders and others share a meal of traditional foods.

Notice the blue plastic container, and the Ziploc plastic bags--we're going to get back to those in a moment.

 

Source: http://ecci-2012.s3.amazonaws.com/thumbs/20120814_ecc_grp_iic_awi_70_502ab33f88f97.JPG.poster.jpg accessed 3 October 2012

 

Bogdan describes the scene:

The most desirable food served at the blanket toss festival is fermented whale meat and blubber (mikiaq). Elders particularly like mikiaq, because it is easy to chew. To keep the audience interested and at the site, mikiaq is served last, after all the other food items have been distributed.

 

Mikiaq is

raw whale blubber that has been left to soak and ferment in the whale's blood.

 

Fermentation occurs when, under anaerobic conditions (reduced or no oxygen), you convert sugars (carbohydrates containing carbon [C], hydrogen [H], and oxygen [O] atoms as building blocks) like the kinds of glucose here:

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/06/DL-Glucose.svg accessed 3 October 2012

 

 

 

into ethanol, the kind of alcohol in drinks such as beer, wine, and spirits, a process which rearranges those atoms into this arrangement:

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/Ethanol-2D-flat.png accessed 3 October 2012

 

Greenlandic to English Dictionary

nuna iterssaliorpâ: digs a hole in the ground, p. 180 (Old orthography)

qasaerdlâq: a seal which has been put by whole and left to ferment, p. 211 (Old orthography)

 

Back in the old days, fermenting the mikiaq was accomplished by digging a hole in the ground, and leaving it there for as long as it took the process to occur naturally.

Nowadays, just like most of the rest of us reading this, circumpolar peoples have access to modern conveniences like the blue container and the Ziploc bags you saw in the photo from the festival.

Plastic bags, containers, and utensils, no matter how bad they are for the environment, have some convenient qualities that make them so widespread in food preparation. One of those properties is the ability to keep food fresh for longer periods of time.

It does this by sealing the food away from exposure to air that would cause it to decay faster. In other words, it promotes an anaerobic environment.

And that's where the connection to the increased cases of botulism lies.

This is caused by the traditional Eskimo practice of allowing animal products such as whole fish, fish heads, walrus, sea lion, and whale flippers, beaver tails, seal oil, birds, etc., to ferment for an extended period of time before being consumed. The risk is exacerbated when a plastic container is used for this purpose instead of the old-fashioned, traditional method, a grass-lined hole, as the botulinum bacteria thrive in the anaerobic conditions created by the air-tight enclosure in plastic.--Wikipedia, "Fermentation: Risks of consuming fermented foods accessed 3 October 2012

 

Fermentation in a grass-lined hole, while still an anaerobic process, is less efficient at keeping the oxygen out, since air will circulate in and out of the hole and between the blades of grass. The C. botulinum bacteria have to overcome the deadly oxygen in that air, if they are going to establish a strong enough foothold to produce enough neurotoxin to make the mikiaq dangerous to the people who eat it.

A plastic container, on the other hand, does a much better job of keeping out the oxygen. Less oxygen in the container means a more welcoming environment for C. botulinum, where they can start to churn out neurotoxin.

As plastics have come into wider and wider use in the general population, and as they have made their way to more remote areas, where the convenience appealed to people, they took the existing risk of botulism, and--by providing a better anaerobic environment--sent the cases of botulism much higher than had been the case when mikiaq used to be fermented in the traditional grass-lined hole.

 


What all this means is that--contrary to what you may have heard--evidence-based practice does not mean that you have to give up traditional practices just because they are traditional, and adopt modern practices just because they are modern.

It means that instead of a top-down simplistic rule-based approach (either "Old = Good! New = Bad!": the "Argument from antiquity" fallacy, or the other way around, "Old = Bad! New = Good!": the "Argument from modernity" fallacy), we take a bottom-up approach of examining the evidence itself, and then deriving more nuanced and accurate rules that we can turn around and apply. Which, in turn, means that everything, traditional and modern alike, gets examined to find out:

  • what works in the way it claims to,
  • what doesn't work in the way it claims to, and
  • the mechanisms for why that is the case.

 

Once we better understand the answers to those questions, we can better decide which practices fit better into our client-centered model of service, and why they do so. This example was a perfect demonstration of how sometimes evidence supports the traditional practice as objectively better, as measured on the basis of outcomes (number of cases of botulism), than the modern practice.

 

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e2/PSM_V37_D324_Greenland_eskimo.jpg accessed 3 October 2012

No blame, no shame: How we got here is not as important as finding ways to fix the problems

The world has shifted out from under us.

And although we're not the only ones it's happened to, that's cold comfort as we have to go through the disruption that shift causes us.

That disruption can cause us to lash out in pain sometimes. Additionally, it's very easy to decide that someone else is that cause of all the problems, and to paint them as a cardboard cut-out depiction of a villain.

Although those reactions are understandable, we're not going to indulge in them here. No matter how intense our feelings of distress, we are going to behave better than that. We are going to start with the principle that we need to fix the problem, rather than fighting with each other over the past.

As humans, we often share meaning with each other by means of stories. There is a traditional story in Buddhism which carries some of the meaning I'm trying to convey here:

The parable of the arrow (or 'Parable of the poisoned arrow') is a Buddhist parable that illustrates the skeptic and pragmatic themes of the Cula-Malunkyovada Sutta (The Shorter Instructions to Malunkya) which is part of the middle length discourses (Majjhima Nikaya), one of the five sections of the Sutta Pitaka.

..


"It's just as if a man were wounded with an arrow thickly smeared with poison. His friends & companions, kinsmen & relatives would provide him with a surgeon, and the man would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know whether the man who wounded me was a noble warrior, a priest, a merchant, or a worker.' He would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know the given name & clan name of the man who wounded me... until I know whether he was tall, medium, or short... until I know whether he was dark, ruddy-brown, or golden-colored... until I know his home village, town, or city... until I know whether the bow with which I was wounded was a long bow or a crossbow... until I know whether the bowstring with which I was wounded was fiber, bamboo threads, sinew, hemp, or bark... until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was wild or cultivated... until I know whether the feathers of the shaft with which I was wounded were those of a vulture, a stork, a hawk, a peacock, or another bird... until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was bound with the sinew of an ox, a water buffalo, a langur, or a monkey.' He would say, 'I won't have this arrow removed until I know whether the shaft with which I was wounded was that of a common arrow, a curved arrow, a barbed, a calf-toothed, or an oleander arrow.' The man would die and those things would still remain unknown to him."

Cula-Malunkyovada Sutta: The Shorter Instructions to Malunkya" (MN 63), Majjhima Nikaya


--Quoted in Wikipedia, "Parable of the arrow" accessed 24 September 2012

 

Granted, we're not totally subscribing to this principle, because understanding how we got into a situation is sometimes useful in figuring out how we're going to avoid a similar situation in the future.

So we'll temper that story's strong pronouncement a little bit, and go with the idea that--for our purposes--most of the time, the most important aspects are not assigning blame for anyone's past actions, but accepting that we have a problem in the present, and committing to assessing and describing the problem, so that we can proceed to address and resolve it.

Ralph Stephens is correct that a lot of current instructors are unqualified. But no child aspires to be an unqualified teacher when they grow up; the situation is the result of historical forces, not the goal. Back when we were in an economy that could not supply MTs fast enough to meet demand, "see one, do one, teach one" looked like a reasonable way to promote instructors to graduate students to address that gap faster.

Things have changed, but that doesn't mean that past efforts were the deliberate result of bad intentions. It just means that those earlier solutions are no longer working for us, and we need to fix them.

Similarly, he's right when he points out the risks of monoculture (systems with little or no diversity) when students have only 1 or 2 teachers for their entire curriculum. But I'm willing to bet my right kidney that no school owner ever said, "Let's deliberately expose our students to a single-point-of-failure system.".

That that turned out to be the effect is an indicator that we need to modify the course we're on, but it doesn't mean that small school owners are to blame for all our problems. Once again, it's an artifact in the present of a solution tried to address a problem in the past, and although we need to fix it, we don't need to cast aspersions on all small schools.

(UPDATE, 11:29 AM PDT: I've modified the next paragraph to make clear that what I originally stated as though it were a fact is actually my impression of the situation. I thank Matpardini for bringing my attention to my original overstatement.)

It's my understanding, although I don't actually have the evidence to back it up for sure, that many small schools have a good track record, as measured by pass rates on licensing exams. If this is true, then I believe that it further underscores the point I'm making that, if we are going to look at the issues, it's only fair to include the good aspects they bring to the table as well as we consider what needs to be done in massage education. And if I am mistaken, then I think that that means I am mistaken about that particular fact, but I stand by the moral principle that we should look at all aspects of the situation. Not that it means we're not going to fix a problem--I still believe we need to do that--but to avoid falling into the trap of bogging down in blaming an oversimplified depiction of a group of stakeholders of massage.

If we're going to actually address the problems we're facing in massage education, I suggest the following first principles to ground the discussion in:

  1. We need to understand how we got to the present situation, so that we don't fall into the same problems in the future, but right now our highest priority needs to be recognizing and addressing the immediate problems, for the sake of clients and students who don't have the time to wait. We have serious structural problems that we need to commit to fixing.
  2. We recognize that no one individual or single group of MT stakeholders is to blame for the current situation--that it's the result of historical and structural forces in a period of massive disruption--and although we need to speak frankly about the problems to find a solution, we are not going to indulge in blaming and shaming of anyone. It hinders our efforts to find solutions. We start from the principle that--unless someone actively demonstrates a very, very good reason to modify that assumption--that everyone is coming to the table in good faith and with the best of intentions, and deserves the benefit of the doubt.
  3. We acknowledge that there are critical problems that need fixing, and we recognize as well that fixing these problems is going to cause further disruptions that MT stakeholders will have to bear the brunt of. We start from the principle that we are all in this together, and that we are operating from a client-centered perspective, and that any change that causes disruption needs to occur for a good reason that supports this client-centered mission.

 

These principles will, by no means, guarantee that the road ahead of us will be smooth, nor that we will succeed. It's possible to do everything right, yet still fail, and I'm not going to lie to you about the reality of the situation.

But, I argue, they do provide us the best possible basis for frank, honest, open, and transparent discussion of issues that we cannot afford to remain in denial about any longer.

Source: http://www.lexphoto.co.uk/laosblogimages/buddha%20park%20archer.jpg accessed 24 September 2012

The Seven Deadly Sins of Ralph Stephens

Hmmm--that title sounds like I'm accusing Ralph Stephens of committing seven deadly sins. :)

But the more precise and accurate title, "The Seven Deadly Sins of Massage Education In The Way It Is Currently Practiced, As Described By Ralph Stephens", doesn't exactly roll off the tongue, does it?

There are many things that Stephens and I disagree on, often to the point of having diametrically opposite assessments of a situation, and recommendations about how to proceed.

However, it is a positive joy to engage with someone who remains professional and civil, even in strong and passionate disagreement on the issues, and I thank him for the high level of good-faith discourse that he brings to collegial discussions about shaping the future of massage.

And in this post, we don't even have to be concerned with how we handle disagreement, because I am going to argue that he is dead-on with his assessment of the problems in massage education.

 


The full title of Stephen's article in Massage Today is "The ELAP Project vs. The Seven Deadly Sins of Massage Education".

The ELAP (Entry-Level Analysis Project) is a very important topic, and deserves a dedicated post at some future point. For the moment, we'll concentrate just on the problems in massage education that Stephens has identified, and what I think we need to be talking about as a result.

So right now, we'll address only the part of his article from the heading "The Seven Deadly Sins" to the end.

There is a German expression, "Er nimmt kein Blatt vor dem Mund"--literally, "he doesn't hold any (flowers and) leaves in front of his mouth". In other words, Stephens speaks his mind, and is willing to call it as he sees it.

Colleagues, here comes the real truth of the situation that no one has had the courage to put on the table until now. Standardizing the number of hours or the curriculum content (ELAP) will not improve educational outcomes as long as our massage educational institutions are allowed to:

  1. Employ unqualified instructors.
  2. Deliver the curriculum in a disjointed "modular" system that prevents sequential learning and integration.
  3. Have just one (or maybe two) instructors teach the entire curriculum.
  4. Use stock courses off the shelf that serve a variety of career programs, instead of courses designed specifically for a massage therapy program.
  5. Enroll students who lack the interpersonal skills or the cognitive, physical, and emotional resources to be competent and ethical practitioners.
  6. Keep students in a program whose performance is marginal, just to get their Federal Student Aid disbursements (tuition).
  7. Allow students to graduate who cannot perform a competent massage, or create a secure therapist/client relationship.

The (ELAP) is a further diversion from the long and challenging work that will be needed to address these "sins." Two things are needed to "heal" the problem, money and moral conviction. ABMP, AMTA and FSMTB must be persuaded to give substantial and ongoing financial support to COMTA and AFMTE to assist them with their respective missions. COMTA because we need a strong accrediting agency dedicated to the field of massage therapy. That is the natural place for educational standards to live. AFMTE because their Teacher Education Standards Project (TESP) is the trail that the entire education sector must follow if we are to truly "elevate" the profession from the sad state in which it currently exists.

 

Let's stipulate for the moment that we're going to put off the discussion of ELAP for a dedicated post.

Other than recognizing a need to engage in a little more discussion of ELAP, I would argue that Stephens is exactly right in his identification of major problems in massage education as it currently stands.

He continues with recommendations:

These organizations also need to take a public stand - an unequivocal position - that the operational practices listed in the "Seven Deadly Sins" are no longer acceptable in the massage therapy field; that we expect better from our schools and programs. They may not have the force of law, but such moral courage on the part of community leaders, consistently stated, can and will instigate a change in institutional behavior.

We must take up these challenges for the sake of the massage seeking public and for the lineage of our profession. Want to be part of the solution? Get involved. Thank you for your caring for our profession.

 

I wholeheartedly join Stephens in his call for these goals, and the posts that follow this one will explore in depth how we can address the challenges and obstacles that lie in the way of our solving these problems.

 

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/03/Hieronymus_Bosch-_The_Seven_Deadly_Sins_and_the_Four_Last_Things.JPG accessed 23 September 2012

 

Massage in a biopsychosocial model (#29/31)

Psychosocial and cognitive approaches don't require that you become a clinical psychologist but that you have a broad concept of the influence of those factors and that you account for them in your encounters with your patients. Know the literature and be able to give management advice based on evidence. When people come to see you they want a plan. Have a plan that is defensible and that works toward their goals. Address concerns, fear avoidance, other stress, and unhelpful beliefs with compassion, understanding, empathy, and informed knowledge.

Understanding why people hurt is part of our professional responsibility and should change most everything we do on a daily basis away from traditional methods and towards methods defensible with modern science.--Jason Silvernail accessed 5 August 2011

 

Since I'm advocating massage in a biopsychosocial model, it's my job to connect the dots and explain what I mean by that.

A biopsychosocial model of health and illness is one that takes into account the role of biology (and other sciences), psychological factors, and sociocultural factors, as well as the interactions among those different factors, in seeking to understand what health and illness really are.

An example of a biological factor in health could be increased cortisol in the bloodstream in response to chronic stress. The interaction of that biological factor with the increased daily stress in modern society would be an example of interactions among biological factors and sociocultural factors.

An example of a psychological factor in health could be a man who is less likely to seek professional treatment for pain than a woman is, because of his perception that stoically enduring pain is what men do in the society he grew up and lives in. The increased structural damage that can occur as a result of ignoring symptoms and delaying treatment is an example of the interactions among psychological factors and biological factors.

An example of a social factor in health could be the relative stigmatization of mental or behavioral illness, as compared to how more clearly structural conditions are regarded. This stigmatization can drive psychological conditions underground--say, for example, if someone did not get needed psychological treatment because they didn't want it to show up in their medical record. That would be an example of interactions among sociocultural factors and psychological factors.

Biopsychosocial massage is client-centered. That means that the psychological and social factors in the client's unique experience, as well as the universal biological factors we are all subject to, is the center of where we focus our attention and caring. It doesn't mean that we accept everything in someone else's experience is literally true. It does mean that we recognize that, for them it feels true, and for that reason alone, it is important in where we meet the client in the therapeutic encounter.

Biopsychosocial massage welcomes self-expression and the art of massage. It is clear, however, that sometimes our need for self-expression can come into conflict with clients' immediate healthcare needs, and--when that happens--we recognize that, in order to act as healthcare professionals, our ethical fiduciary duty is to put the clients' needs first, ahead of ours if necessary.

Biopsychosocial massage is wholistic, integrative, and evidence-based. That means that it does not draw upon supernatural explanations of mechanisms, and it builds upon foundational knowledge in the sciences to evaluate and validate the evidence for or against particular claims of effectiveness or mechanisms.

Since our encounters with clients will always run ahead of the available high-quality evidence, we don't limit ourselves only to what has been rigorously validated by studies and nothing else. We take our professional experience into account, and we actively seek to understand and incorporate the clients' preferences, whenever possible, in treatment. But in all these cases, in developing our approach to caring for the client, we remain clear on what is evidence, what is speculation, what is science, what is art, what is literal, and what is metaphor.

Understanding the material physical universe around us, and the centuries of cumulative human knowledge about that universe, give us powerful tools to draw upon. That understanding, combined with the caring that characterizes so many people who choose to go into massage as a career, is the heart of biopsychosocial massage.

Neil deGrasse Tyson sums it up almost perfectly:

I am driven by two main philosophies, know more today about the world than I knew yesterday. And lessen the suffering of others. You'd be surprised how far that gets you.

--Neil deGrasse Tyson

 

That quotation demonstrates the core of massage in a biopsychosocial model.


Source: http://healthskills.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/biopsychosocial.jpg accessed 7 August 2012

Looking into the abyss (#26/31)

It's not easy to face the realization of having been misled.

And the misleading does not have to be intentional; it could have been done with the best intentions in the world.

But those good intentions don't change the facts that, as a result, the student is launched into real-life practice operating with poor information, is bringing misinformation into the relationship with the client, and is being publicly evaluated on the basis of that misinformation by other potential partners in a unified healthcare team.

It could have happened to any of us--the field of massage is notorious for promoting teachers out of the ranks of students who have simply passed the class they're now expected to teach. Biomedical physicians have nothing on massage when it comes to "See one, do one, teach one".

No blame, no shame: one set out to create that situation; it just evolved that way, undirected. And there was an unspoken social contract that allowed it to continue, because the need for teachers was so high.

But the social contract has changed out from under us, and the current situation is no longer sustainable in light of the responsibilities expected of healthcare professionals.

Ralph Stephens names the problem as the very first one in his list of the educational "seven deadly sins":

Standardizing the number of hours or the curriculum content (ELAP) will not improve educational outcomes as long as our massage educational institutions are allowed to:

  1. Employ unqualified instructors.

...

Two things are needed to "heal" the problem, money and moral conviction. ABMP, AMTA and FSMTB must be persuaded to give substantial and ongoing financial support to COMTA and AFMTE to assist them with their respective missions. COMTA because we need a strong accrediting agency dedicated to the field of massage therapy. That is the natural place for educational standards to live. AFMTE because their Teacher Education Standards Project (TESP) is the trail that the entire education sector must follow if we are to truly "elevate" the profession from the sad state in which it currently exists.

These organizations also need to take a public stand - an unequivocal position - that the operational practices listed in the "Seven Deadly Sins" are no longer acceptable in the massage therapy field; that we expect better from our schools and programs. They may not have the force of law, but such moral courage on the part of community leaders, consistently stated, can and will instigate a change in institutional behavior.

 

Stephens is right about going forward--but what about all the students, practitioners, and teachers who are coming to grips with the fact that much of what they were taught is exaggerated, counterfactual, or simply wrong?

It takes a great deal of courage on their part to stare unflinching into that abyss, and to engage with what's needed to collect, assimilate, organize, and share good information.

The upheaval and disruption in the process is causing a great deal of moral distress and pain in people who are re-evaluating where they are, and how far away they are from where they need to be.

One thing that they do not have to worry about here is being blamed for having been taught wrong.

The policy here is, "no blame, no shame": it is not someone's fault that they did not get the education they deserve, and if they are trying to fix that situation, they deserve--and will have--our support in that journey.

The Buddhist concept of samma-vaca--"right speech"--is a useful guide to discourse here at POEM.

It's often summarized as, "Is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary?".

We'll examine those questions in a slightly different order than they're usually posed.

"Is it true?": The standard at POEM is that we will not pass along misinformation here.

Massage stakeholders can depend on POEM for accurate information about massage.

If someone is making a factual error, it's ok to correct that error civilly and professionally. That means focusing on the facts, not on the person--no personal attacks, just connecting the dots on what the facts are.

Not everything is a matter of fact, of course--there is no scientific answer to the question "Is chocolate or vanilla better?"--and interpretations, creativity, and imagination are welcome topics for discussion, as long as active misinformation doesn't ride along.

"Is it necessary?": There is a wide consensus that something is rotten in the state of massage education, so yes, having a portal to the shared body of biomedical knowledge that members of a unified and client-centered healthcare professional team all draw upon to varying degrees is an absolutely necessary--and as-yet unmet--niche that POEM is being developed to fill.

"Is it kind?": Absolutely: everyone who participates here can expect to be treated kindly. Kindness does not mean letting misinformation go uncorrected; it means that misinformation will be corrected in a civil, professional, and kind manner, without attacking the person.

When someone does not have access to good and high-quality information, because of gaps in their education, the kind and considerate thing to do is to offer them a bridge to obtain that information.

Giving them an opportunity to correct themselves is far kinder than leaving them--and their clients--to the consequences of misinformation.

We're in really deep waters here, as a result of a number of historical, social, political, and cultural factors all coming together and synergizing.

But if POEM has any say at all in the matter, then we will get through these difficulties, because we'll support each other in learning and growing along the way.

 

Source: http://www.education.noaa.gov/images/article_ocean_floor_2.jpg accessed 26 August 2012

Are you mandated? (#23/31)

I always looked forward to my trip over the bridge to see my client, Mrs. Ford, in her skilled nursing facility in West Seattle.

Mrs. Ford had a long history of smoking before the stroke that took away most of her ability to speak and to move, so she was quite frail and had difficulty breathing. Despite the fact that she couldn't talk to me, and that she was mostly paralyzed, she was a sweet, cheerful lady, who managed to communicate a lot of meaning without being able to speak.

We worked out a system, much like "20 Questions", where I'd ask a yes-or-no question, and--based on the answer to that question--I'd choose the next question to ask. Depending on the quality of her sigh in response, I knew the answer was "yes" or "no", and then we'd proceed to the next question, until I was sure she was comfortable, securely positioned, and ready for her massage.

It was a laborious method, but it met her communication needs in the absence of her being able to speak.

Since I was so used to communicating with her in this way, I was totally blown away one day when, lying supine on the table, she grabbed my wrist in a death grip, and pulled me close to her face.

In a breathy whisper, she slowly forced her lips to form the words "Shheee's.......hurrttingg......mmmeeeee."

One of the nursing assistants had been abusing her, knowing that she was unable to defend herself.

 

 


Do you know what the laws are in the state regarding your status as a mandated reporter--one who is required to report cases of suspected abuse or neglect of a member of a vulnerable population?

Are you considered a mandated reporter?

If so, what populations are you responsible for making reports about, if you suspect that someone is being abused or neglected?

What counts as abuse? Physical? Sexual? Emotional? Financial? Neglect?

RAINN (The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network) provides information pages about the laws in different states.

They also provide this information:

  • Who Must Report?
  • Standard of Knowledge
  • Definition of Applicable Victim
  • Reports Made To
  • Contents of Report
  • Timing/Other Procedures
  • Other
  • Source/Applicable Statute(s)

 

They seem pretty good, but it would also not hurt to check them against other information sources, such as the local chapter of your professional organization, for example.

The reason I'm not sure it's right is that, for my state (Washington), it lists MTs as mandated reporters for elder abuse, but not for children.

It's not impossible that that's the way the law really reads, but I want to double-check that before assuming.

In a way, it doesn't matter, because I am not about to sit on my hands and say, oh, well, a child's being abused, but I'm not required to report it, la la la. So it won't change what I would ever do if I did learn that a child was being abused.

But on the other hand, it does seem odd that elder abuse reporting is mandated, but child abuse is not.

So for the moment, at least, I'd treat this source much as I treat Wikipedia--a good portal or jumping-off place, but not the be-all and end-all of necessary information that I depend on to get exactly right.

 

 


What happened with Mrs. Ford was this: I asked her daughter what she might be talking about, because I did not fully understand. Her daughter suspected she knew who her mother was talking about, and confirmed it with her mother.

We then went to the director of the skilled nursing facility to report it.

It turned out that this nursing assistant had a checkered track record, and was on probation. Abusing Mrs. Ford was the last straw, and the nursing assistant was let go after an investigation of the accusation.

I continued to work with Mrs. Ford for a couple of years after that, and when I returned to school, she was the only client that I kept on working with while trying to adjust to the grad school environment and the course load.

I stayed her MT until she passed away.

But except for that one time, she never tried to speak verbally to me again.

 

Source: National Committee for the Prevention of Elder Abuse, "Preventing Abuse to Elders" http://www.preventelderabuse.org/images/img03.jpg accessed 22 August 2012

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