Anatomy and physiology group

Its increasingly more important for massage therapist's to revise and keep up to speed their A+P knowledge.

Why the A + P you have learnt will change ?????

A very interesting discussion TO MANY POINTS TO LIST HERE, WELL WORTH GETTING YOUR HEAD AROUND ! :)


http://www.ttem.org/forum/index.php?topic=1807.10


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    Sandy Fritz

    Very True. I have been presenting these topics in the textbooks I write for years.
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    Stephen Jeffrey

    Hi Ty and Sandy

    yes is does seem like I and many others have been missing out " big time " in any sort of appreciation "aha" for the fact that fascia is full of active nerve cells and bones "float" .

    For many therapists this mindset will be too bigger jump to take, and it risks their outright early rejection (especially if they just spent yrs learning a+p without fascia) but, hopefully, with more access to quality media specifically aimed at massage therapists, the quicker we can expand it into our thinking, intuition and practice.:)

    A great time to be a massage therapist :)
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    Jeff Sims

    Yes, this is a great time with great opportunities to learn and apply new information that is validated by old wisdom.

    Stephen Jeffrey said:
    Hi Ty and Sandy

    yes is does seem like I and many others have been missing out " big time " in any sort of appreciation "aha" for the fact that fascia is full of active nerve cells and bones "float" .

    For many therapists this mindset will be too bigger jump to take, and it risks their outright early rejection (especially if they just spent yrs learning a+p without fascia) but, hopefully, with more access to quality media specifically aimed at massage therapists, the quicker we can expand it into our thinking, intuition and practice.:)

    A great time to be a massage therapist :)