Clinical Massage Certificate Program

About the Career

Opportunities Continue to Grow

The percentage of American adults who had one or more massages has doubled in the past six years. Now each year almost 20% of the U.S population experiences one of massage therapies many benefits – pain relief, stress reduction, circulation improvement, and much more as they have also discovered the sense of well-being that results from a session with a certified clinical massage therapist.

Is This Career for You?

As doctors and consumers turn more and more to massage as an allied health therapy, you could find yourself working in very diverse settings.

Do you want to be part of the healthcare scene? If so, you will find opportunities in conjunction with chiropractic offices, physical therapy practices, obstetrics and neonatal units at hospitals, and in nursing homes with geriatric clients.

Or maybe you prefer the sports and athletic framework for your career in clinical massage therapy. Many colleges and universities contract with massage therapists or even have one as part of their training staff to keep their athletes in top form or help them recuperate from injuries. Health clubs are also employing massage therapists as adjunct service providers to their members who are vitally interested in getting and staying fit.

One of the fastest growing arenas for clinical massage therapists is working with others in the field of cosmetology. Often considered a “luxury” setting, these sites are most often part of the services offered through beauty salons and spas that may cater to an upscale clientele. One of the most elite settings is on a cruise ship, either as a contract employee or as part of the ship’s regular staff.

If you are an individual player and like to be your own boss – consider private practice, where you set the locale and schedule. If clinical massage therapy will be an adjunct profession that you combine with other skills such as nursing or cosmetology, then private practice may be your ticket to success.

The opportunities are there and waiting for you. If you have the time, motivation and commitment to the rigorous course of classroom study and clinical practice, you will reach your goals and launch an exciting new career.

What is Clinical/Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork?

Simply stated, clinical/therapeutic massage and bodywork is the application of massage techniques with more specific intent and purpose, emphasizing the treatment of myofascial injury and chronic pain, structural and postural distortions, and biomechanical soft tissue dysfunction. It is a fascinating, incredible experience as the advancements continue in the area of clinical massage and bodywork. Clinical massage therapists are becoming a vital part of the health practitioners' team with an invaluable talent to share. As the massage and bodywork profession continues to advance the training levels to include assessment and treatment of most soft tissue injuries, clinical massage therapists are becoming a crucial link to the team of medical practitioners including physicians, physical therapists, chiropractors, athletic trainers, etc., who are accepting them as an asset to their work rather than a threat.

Clinical massage and bodywork is not limited in its techniques and application. It incorporates and utilizes an array of styles, methods and modalities to facilitate healing. However, clinical massage and bodywork does utilize the application of massage techniques that adhere to specific anatomical and physiological considerations. These applied considerations, along with knowledge of basic musculoskeletal evaluation, assessment and client education will produce positive results in musculoskeletal healthcare. Clinical massage and bodywork is a combination of massage, and a shared responsibility between the clinical therapist and the client. As clinical therapists, we must understand that we are not healers; we are facilitators of healing the body, mind and spirit. Even if we learn every modality of massage and do every technique correctly, the client must be the one to choose and claim the final result from our work. We can facilitate awareness, and a client's ability to release his/her own tension patterns so that he/she may live more physiologically, structurally, and biomechanically balanced.

While the clinical massage therapist recognizes that allopathic health care is, at times, necessary we realize that sometimes it may not be the best method of treatment (or possibly even ineffective at promoting health). In addition, conventional belief also tends to look at the symptom and the problem as one and the same, so that when the symptom has been eliminated it is presumed that the problem is healed. The clinical therapist sees a symptom as a signal that something is wrong. When a symptom alone is eliminated, it is most likely being suppressed. Unless the original cause has also been eliminated, the symptom may return later in a chronic form. Rather than looking at symptoms as entities in and of themselves which must be "fixed" the clinical massage therapist looks for the cause of dysfunction rather than just treating symptoms.

Clinical/therapeutic massage and bodywork is a multidisciplinary approach to chronic pain based on sound physiological principles and neurological laws. It is a form of bodywork that identifies and treats muscular imbalances, creating balance (homeostasis) in the neurological--muscular--skeletal systems. Most pain and injury is linked to imbalances in these systems.

In summary, clinical/therapeutic massage and bodywork has effectively integrated education from the profession's pioneers of massage and bodywork, the current leading structural body workers, exercise trainers, physical therapist, etc., to eliminate the most complicated pain conditions. It focuses on the entire body with emphasis on restoring pain free range of motion throughout the body and complete structural balance. It addresses chronic pain and injury conditions with emphasis on the underlying causes and pathology of each condition.

The knowledgeable and trained practitioner of clinical massage therapy and bodywork who can identify and treat musculoskeletal dysfunctions (the "tonus system") utilizing postural evaluation, assessment, muscle testing and hands-on palpatory skills is becoming increasingly accepted, and even in demand among mainstream medicine and therapies.