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USC faculty and staff are able to participate in our
seated chair massage program. The 25-minute massage
requires no undressing and uses no oils.
To make an appointment, call 777-4969. Massage services are provided at the Thomson Student Health Center in room 316. There is a $25 fee for the 25 minute massage.
Massage is well known for reducing
stress and promoting relaxation. A growing body of
research also shows that massage therapy is effective
for relieving and managing chronic and acute pain, a
significant national health problem. According to the
National Institute for Health, more than one-third of
all Americans will suffer from chronic pain at some
point in their lives, and approximately 14 percent of
all employees take time off from work due to pain.
Increasingly, massage therapists are being incorporated
into pain management programs of hospitals and health
care organizations. The Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations has suggested
massage therapy as one means to manage pain without use
of pharmaceuticals.
According to a recent American
Hospital Association survey about their use of CAM
(complementary and alternative medicine) therapies,
among the 1,007 hospitals responding, nearly 82 percent
of the hospitals offering CAM therapies included massage
therapy among their health care offerings -- with more
than 70 percent utilizing massage therapy for pain
management and relief. In a recent consumer survey
commissioned by AMTA, 91 percent of respondents agreed
that massage can be effective in reducing pain, and
nearly half of those polled (47 percent) have had a
massage specifically for the purpose of relieving pain.
Consider recent clinical
research on the efficacy of massage for pain relief:
- Massage therapy is more effective
for chronic back pain than other complementary
therapies.
- Massage therapy promotes relaxation
and alleviates the perception of pain and anxiety in
cancer patients.
- Massage therapy reduces
post-traumatic headaches better than cold pack
treatments.
- A pilot study conducted at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles found
that massage, as part of hospital-based surgery
treatment, reduces pain and muscle spasms in
patients who have undergone heart bypass surgery.
- Massage stimulates the brain to
produce endorphins.
How does massage relieve pain?
- A simple and direct strategy:
working from the external, outer mechanisms of pain
to the primary, root cause.
- Focuses on the entire body system
and its relationship to soft tissue – not solely
on the site of pain.
Benefits of massage for pain
relief:
- Helps patients become more aware of
their bodies and the sources of pain.
- Better familiarizes patients with
the pain they experience.
- Has an impact on the patient by
virtue of human touch.
- Improves confidence by encouraging
patients to effectively cope with their pain.
Looking
for more information on massage therapy? Try these
links!
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