Aug 09
18
Is Massage a Profession?
Is massage a profession? It is in my opinion and view. I have been working in it for over 20 years.
What makes for a profession is part of the question. I started looking for answers on how professions are defined but I haven’t come up with anything concrete.
Wikipedia says this about the history of professions.
Classically, there were only three professions: Divinity, Medicine, and Law[2]. The main milestones which mark an occupation being identified as a profession are:
- It became a full-time occupation;
- The first training school was established;
- The first university school was established;
- The first local association was established;
- The first national association was established;
- The codes of professional ethics were introduced;
- State licensing laws were established.[2]
It further goes on to say: “A profession arises when any trade or occupation transforms itself through “the development of formal qualifications based upon education and examinations, the emergence of regulatory bodies with powers to admit and discipline members, and some degree of monopoly rights.”
A few years ago a white paper on just this topic was written by Rick Rosen called “On Becoming a Profession (pdf)”. In it he sites his thoughts on what is required for massage therapists to become a profession. He has outlined and talked about in depth these things that need to be done to become a profession.
- Establish a Body of Knowledge
- Improve the quality of massage therapy education
- Reorganize the credentialing process by putting licensure before certification
- Create parity among our state massage laws to increase portability
- Develop and promote a unified professional identity
- Use lessons learned from other professions
The Body of Knowledge is in the works. Rosen says this:
A Body of Knowledge is defined as “a
compendium of what an individual must know to accomplish work in a specific field.” In our case, this would be described according to the competencies that are required to practice handson therapies in a safe and effective manner. Identifying the knowledge, skills and attributes is a
critical first step in building a profession. It establishes the groundwork for determining standards in education, credentialing, regulation and clinical practice.
Keith Grant has also started a collection of massage competencies to further explain what it is we really do.
The quality of schools is under question with the recent large massage school chains buying up smaller massage schools around the country. Our massage schools are also looking to younger people to fill their schools when the average age of massage therapists used to be 45. Currently massage schools report much younger students which requires different teaching methods. At 45 a person has much life experience to draw from and apply to starting and building a practice. But with the creation of the many massage franchises massage schools are seeking out younger people to fill those positions because they are most likely to not need much to live on and are quite happy with a job that pays $1-$15 an hour.
Reorganizing the credentialing process is in the works too with the Federation of Massage State Boards working to create a more formal system for licensing. The NCBTMB will hopefully transition out of the entry-level testing business and redirect its energies toward the development of new and innovative specialty certification programs.
With all of the work of the Federation and Body of Knowledge can we come to more of a consensus and accurately define our profession? Hopefully that will come with all of the work that is being done.
And what can we learn from other professions? Some say that nursing is the profession that most closely resembles the massage profession. I don’t know much about the history of nursing but it might be something to look into.
Because of the work we do with clients is so different than most other professions – touching half naked bodies who are in pain and under stress, there is also the other side of this all and how we are trained to deal with client/therapist relationships – We aren’t for the most part trained in basic massage school. While I have never been a big proponent of more training and licensing for the first time in 20 years I think it might be time to start doing some research and looking into creating 3-4 year programs like Canada and Japan. When I first started out massage was more of a lifestyle choice- being able to help people and work your own hours and choose who you worked on. It still is that but the demands of becoming a profession may require more initial training and more continuing education.
The other part of this – the question on is massage a profession? also depends on each individual and how they represent the massage profession and acting in a professional way. I have always seen it as a profession and take my work and studies seriously. I work with professional people in downtown Seattle and had to learn about being professional to survive. Others who don’t take the profession as seriously may not see how it is growing and becoming a profession more every day. (Did I just contradict myself?)
What can you do today to be more professional? What does being a profession mean to you? Is massage a profession or just a hobby for you?
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