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Mike: As a rehab professional with 20 years in the business, I can aver that the BOK project concerns me greatly. The draft contains so many "basic" requirements that one might as well just attend PT college and be done with it. My greatest concern is that if we try to compete with PTs we will lose in the market.
For one thing, they have more political influence and contribute far more money to federal election campaigns than massage and bodywork professionals. (If anybody thinks this is irrelevant, spend some time at Open Secrets and then look at which legislation gets passed, and you will see a positive correlation between campaign contributions and congressional support for pet legislation. And they try to infer that WE are prostitutes?)
For another, if we try to become Me Too Physical Therapists, we lose our own basis for existing as a free-standing profession. I have successful professional associations with PTs, and we respect our scopes of practice. A clearer differentiation between those scopes actually improves our relations. Many of the BOK “basics” are a dangerous waste of time.
Licensing, particularly national licensing, will do us far more harm than good…except for those who wangle a new job as grand pubas in the new bureaucracy that the rest of us will pay for through licensing fees. These schemes, over time, become exclusionary rather than inclusive. History teaches that power corrupts, but new bureaucracies always start out with a “good” reason: protect public safety, for the children, etc. Unfortunately, it ends with the wealthy and powerful few ruling over the not-so-fortunate many.
I am interested in writing about this at my national Neuromuscular Therapy Examiner column. Anybody who wants to weigh in, please contact me.
I think part of the problem is that there isn't any concrete research on the topic of what we really do need. I do now think that a 4 year program is needed but that is my opinion - what is really needed has never ever been really studied in depth over time.
Are you stating that research in the states is behind schedule or research every where is behind schedule? I am the first to admit that I do not read as much as I should so I do not really know where to go to find research papers on massage and body work other than some of the obvious magazines. I definitely agree with Julie. When I first started getting my massage training people were shocked that I did it in such a short amount of time. A friend of mine from Canada was almost sickened :) His sister is a massage therapist up there and she had to do a full four year degree. They seem to get much more into initial education in other countries for this...have said that I am not up on how all he other countries train new body workers I would have to do more reading before I could make a statement as to whether we are very lax compared to others countries or just a little on the light side.
Part of me feels that with more standardized education/licensing policies across the country therapists would not really have some of the same issues we have today. The prostitute stigma which I have yet to (thank god) to have to deal with in my own practice might become lessoned...optimal word is might. Yes we can bill some insurances right now. I really do not have the inclination to deal with insurance companies as of yet; however, with more education and better licensing policies we could be seen less as an offshoot or co-profession and become more main stream and more of a stand alone profession. Lets face it, a lot of people would not go to massage therapists if they hadn't first gone to a chiropractor or physical therapist who referred them to us. Many people do come in just for relaxation or stress manage and find that we are wonderful at pain management.
We know so much! We can do so much! In my dream world a doctor would tell a patient "go get a couple massages. If you do not start feeling better then we can look at perscriptions to help manage your pain." Is that likely to happen in my life time? I don't know. What I do know is that if I can help get some one off a drug that they should not be taking any way then I should be utilized by the medical world more often! I don't know how my ramblings went from more education and better licensing policies to how I wish the health care industry would change and start utilizing us more. Maybe it's because I think that if a doctor saw us more as equals he would be more willing to refer patients to us. If insurance companies new what we were capable of as far as preventive care then maybe more would be willing to pay for massages making it easier for people who could really use them to get them.
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