I feel that it is important to know the stories behind those who are working hard in the field to bring forward massage therapy research. Interviews with massage therapy researchers will now occasionally be included in the Journal as a new editorial feature. The first interview is with Virginia S. Cowen, PhD, LMT a New York State-licensed and NCB board-certified massage therapist with a PhD from Arizona State. She first became interested in massage therapy research while in massage therapy school, and her most recent work is investigating the integration of massage therapy into medical settings. Dr. Cowen states that massage therapy needs to move to Phase 3 research, and aligning with massage therapy practice and research on massage therapy...
Purpose & Objectives: To foster improved client care and the continued professionalization of Massag...
Introduction: Few NIH funded studies give community massage therapists the opportunity to become stu...
Background: Research on therapeutic massage bodywork (TMB) continues to expand, but few studies cons...
Amanda Baskwill, PhD(c), RMT is influencing the massage therapy profession from seemingly all angles...
Mark Hyman Rapaport, MD is a highly accomplished researcher, academician, and clinician. Dr. Rapapor...
This interview introduces the Journal’s readers to a new massage therapy researcher, Danielle Gentil...
First she became a licensed massage therapist in Kentucky. Then, in a quest to improve the care she ...
As part of our interview editorial series, we bring forth a discussion with Dr. Glenn M. Hymel, the ...
Practice-induced challenges to massage research and education include those related to disparate tra...
Background: Massage therapy (MT) is widely used and expanding rapidly, but systematic research on it...
Background: Clinical practice and randomized trials often have disparate aims, despite involving sim...
Research literacy is an essential and growing component in modern massage school curricula(1,2). The...
Purpose & Objectives: To foster improved client care and the continued professionalization of Massag...
Introduction: Few NIH funded studies give community massage therapists the opportunity to become stu...
Background: Research on therapeutic massage bodywork (TMB) continues to expand, but few studies cons...
Amanda Baskwill, PhD(c), RMT is influencing the massage therapy profession from seemingly all angles...
Mark Hyman Rapaport, MD is a highly accomplished researcher, academician, and clinician. Dr. Rapapor...
This interview introduces the Journal’s readers to a new massage therapy researcher, Danielle Gentil...
First she became a licensed massage therapist in Kentucky. Then, in a quest to improve the care she ...
As part of our interview editorial series, we bring forth a discussion with Dr. Glenn M. Hymel, the ...
Practice-induced challenges to massage research and education include those related to disparate tra...
Background: Massage therapy (MT) is widely used and expanding rapidly, but systematic research on it...
Background: Clinical practice and randomized trials often have disparate aims, despite involving sim...
Research literacy is an essential and growing component in modern massage school curricula(1,2). The...
Purpose & Objectives: To foster improved client care and the continued professionalization of Massag...
Introduction: Few NIH funded studies give community massage therapists the opportunity to become stu...
Background: Research on therapeutic massage bodywork (TMB) continues to expand, but few studies cons...