Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Self-Care

Common Injuries and how to Prevent Them

https://www.amtamassage.org/articles/6/Student_Experience_Newsletter/detail/2586
The Problem—Being Unprepared for the Physical Demands of Massage Therapy.
The risks involved in underestimating the physical demands of massage therapy are many. From work related injury to burnout, massage therapists who don’t have a full understanding of the importance of self-care are likely to suffer injury at some point in their career.
Even those massage therapists who have regular self-care regimens can’t guarantee they won’t ever have to deal with injury. “The best approach for massage therapists is to be as fit as possible for this incredibly physical profession,” says Sandra K. Anderson. “The most important piece of equipment a massage therapist has is their own body.”

Prevention & Protection

Here are just a few suggestions to help you meet the physical demands of the massage therapy profession:

Proper nutrition & diet. According to Anderson, a treatment schedule of 3–4 sessions a day is the same as someone who exercises moderately. “Therefore, daily water intake should be about the same,” she explains. “A common calculation for determining how many ounces of water you need per day is to take your weight and multiply by 0.7.” To complement balanced nutrition, massage therapists should also get regular exercise.

Get enough sleep. “Good, restful sleep allows you to have a more balanced perspective,” says Anderson. “Sleep is also important on a cellular and physical level, giving the body a chance to restore and regenerate.”

Taking time out. You spend a lot of time addressing the needs of your client, and it’s just as important for you to remember your own. “The purpose of downtime is to refresh,” says Anderson. Massage therapists need to spend time pursuing hobbies they enjoy outside the massage therapy profession so they can give their bodies and minds time to rejuvenate.

Hand and Arms

The Problem—Tenosynovitis.
“This condition involves adhesions that develop between a tendon and its surrounding synovial sheath,” explains Whitney Lowe. “It’s most common for massage therapists near the base of the thumb, and is frequently described as DeQuervain’s tenosynovitis.”
Not unlike a wide variety of injuries that can sideline massage therapists, this condition is caused by overuse—in this case, excessive use of the tendons of the thumb. “Thumb, finger and hand movements are an essential part of almost every massage technique,” notes Lowe. “Consequently, when you have a painful condition like tenosynovitis, your ability to use your hands and fingers to the full extent dramatically decreases.”

Prevention & Protection

Lowe emphasizes the need for massage therapists to adequately condition their bodies for the physical demands of massage therapy. “The most effective way to prevent tenosynovitis from occurring is through adequate conditioning,” he says. “Stretching of the affected tendons after each massage session on a regular basis will be helpful.”

Additionally, suggests Lowe, practitioners can self-massage the affected tendons to help reduce any adhesions that might develop between the tendon and its sheath, effectively decreasing the incidence of this condition.
The Problem—Carpel Tunnel Syndrome.
Within the carpal tunnel of the wrist, there are nine tendons of the long finger flexors, as well as the median nerve. “Carpal tunnel syndrome is a condition in which the median nerve becomes compressed, causing sensory and/or motor dysfunction,” explains Joseph Muscolino. “The most common cause of the condition is postural overuse of the wrist joint and/or the fingers.”

Two of the major concerns with carpal tunnel syndrome are the frequency with which it occurs and the time it takes to heal—things that seriously jeopardize a massage therapist’s ability to practice. “Carpal tunnel syndrome is the most frequently occurring nerve compression problem in the upper extremity,” says Whitney Lowe. “The condition is seriously painful, and because nerve compression is involved and nerve tissue is very slow to heal, it takes a great length of time to resolve.”

Prevention & Protection

According to Muscolino, the most problematic posture for carpal tunnel syndrome is full wrist joint extension accompanied by finger flexion. “This posture is common when working at the computer,” he says, “but is also common when doing massage.”

Using your palm to transmit pressure into the client is another risk factor identified by Muscolino, who notes that the palm is especially good for broad, deep pressure, but shouldn’t be relied upon to the exclusion of other contacts. “One alternative is to slightly supinate the forearm so that we contact the client more on the hypothenar eminence, or even the ulnar side of the hand instead of the center of the anterior wrist or palm,” advises Muscolino. “Forearms are another good alternative contact.”

In terms of prevention, Lowe suggests stretching, self massage and conditioning. “Once it’s developed,” he adds, “finding all means possible to help decrease compressive loads on the median nerve is of crucial importance.” Muscolino also suggests massage therapists get regular bodywork to their upper extremities, including the anterior forearm and hand.

Neck and Shoulders

The Problem—Postural Neck Strain.
Although neck strain is extremely common in the general population, the condition is even more prevalent among massage therapists, says Muscolino. “There is no escaping the fact that massage is a physically demanding profession,” he says. “Generating pressure into clients hour after hour is hard work for the musculoskeletal system, no matter how good the body mechanics are.”

Prevention & Protection

To decrease the occurrence of many potential injuries, Muscolino encourages massage therapists to generate pressure from the core of their body instead of relying on one client contact too much. Relieving neck strain, however, is much easier. “The physical stress load on the neck extensors can be largely eliminated if we do not hold our head and neck in flexion,” suggests Muscolino.

But how do you do that? Muscolino believes massage therapists can largely relieve neck strain by doing one simple thing: not looking at their strokes. “The posture required to look at our strokes is usually an imbalanced flexion position with the head over thin air instead of balanced over the trunk,” he explains. “This requires isometric contraction of the neck extensors to hold the head and neck in partial flexion, to prevent falling all the way into flexion with the chin hitting the chest wall.”

Muscolino encourages massage therapists to either keep the head and neck in a neutral, extended position by standing fairly straight up while working or resting their chin against their chest to relieve the extensors from having to work so hard. “Closing our eyes when working reminds us that we do not need to watch the work being done so often,” he says. “We allow ourselves to better focus on what we are feeling with our hands.”
The Problem—Shoulder Strain.
“Shoulder strain of the deltoid and rotator cuff group muscles is extremely common in massage therapists,” explains Muscolino. There are two primary reasons this condition occurs, according to Muscolino.

The first is that a massage therapist’s arms are so often isometrically held out in a position of flexion and/or abduction when practitioners are manipulating soft tissue. The second is that many massage therapists learned to generate pressure from their shoulders.

Prevention & Protection

“The solution to both of these problems is to learn to generate pressure, especially deep pressure, from the core of the body,” Muscolino explains. “When the arms are placed down and in front and against the core of the body as much as possible, the pressure can transfer from the core directly into the forearm, and then the hand into the client.”

For reference, during body mechanics workshops, Muscolino likes to ask therapists to place their elbow inside the ASIS, or as close as possible. “If the strain is already present, then clinical soft tissue manipulation into the affected muscles is extremely important,” advises Muscolino. “Each of the rotator cuff muscles should be individually targeted.”

The Emotional

The Problem—Not Having an Adequate Support System.
If massage therapists start feeling isolated in their work, the consequences may be wide-ranging. They might start feeling ineffective in the massage therapy they provide, feel lonely, emotionally spent and bored—all of which could end with a case of burnout and the loss of loyal clientele.

Prevention & Protection

“Support can take many different forms for massage therapists,” says Anderson. “Family and friends they trust, supervision, mentoring and peer support, to name a few.”

According to Anderson, supervision would involve a periodic review of a massage therapist’s work and professional behavior in the work environment. “Ideally,” she says, “the supervisor has experience and insight into the profession and can help less experienced practitioners develop a deeper understanding of their professional work and of the importance of self-care.”

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