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Medical Massage |
Wellness Massage |
commercial context |
health care system |
personal service industry |
customer relationship |
patient |
client |
dominant paradigm |
scientific, problem-solving |
intuitive, nurturing |
reason for treatment |
medical necessity |
client request |
focus |
functional outcomes |
client satisfaction |
termination of care |
maximum medical improvement (usually) |
when client's needs are met or change |
primary massage treatment techniques |
clinical massage techniques like myofascial treatments, deep tissue massage, Cyriax cross-fiber friction, neuromuscular "trigger point" technique, and muscle energy technique |
relaxation massage techniques like Swedish, deep tissue, circulatory massage, and craniosacral |
pricing |
rates set by UCR and RVU |
rates set by the consumer marketplace |
billing services |
yes (discount for payment at time of service) |
no (all payments due at time of service) |
payment |
can take 30-90 days or longer |
due at time of service |
tipping |
never/rarely |
often |
therapist accountable to |
- patients
- IRS/state/local taxes
- state/city licensing authorities
- certification boards
- referring providers
- other HCPs involved with case
- insurance companies
- health care networks
- attorneys
- courts
- independent medical examiners
- auditors
|
- clients
- IRS/state/local taxes
- state/city licensing authorities
- certification boards
|
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Medical Massage |
Wellness Massage |
time spent on documentation, coordination, and communication |
10-30 minutes or more per session |
2-5 minutes or less per session |
training |
basic 500-hour massage certification course plus advanced training in
- orthopedic assessment & treatment protocols
- pathologies and contraindications
- medical terminology
- pharmacology
- documentation
- communication skills
|
basic 500-hour massage certification course |
experience |
need clinical and professional experience and/or an internship |
can start practicing right after graduating from massage school |
receiver's emotional state/level of proactiveness |
didn't ask to be injured, may be depressed, anxious, or otherwise distressed by both the injury/accident and/or ensuing work, life, and health complications |
proactively seeking care, typically healthy and active |
physical demands on practitioner |
can be heavy - orthodpedic assessments, mobilizations, myofascial treatments, cross-fiber frictioning, and other injury-treatment techniques can be hard on your body |
may be lighter - Swedish and some other techniques are less demanding, but deep tissue massage can be hard on your body |
emotional demands on practitioner |
can be heavy - patients can be disengaged, distraught, or otherwise unengaged or difficult to engage |
typically light and/or manageable |
client education |
may be OK (therapist should ask the prescribing referrer about this), but shouldn't contradict what the rest of the medical team is saying |
OK within scope of practice ("drink plenty of water," "do that stretch I showed you," "put an ice pack on it," etc.) |
marketing model |
business-to-business networking with referring providers, health care networks, etc.; many legal and ethical considerations regarding referral relationships, etc. |
consumer marketing (much like a tax preparer, hair dresser, real estate agent, etc.); gift certificates, referral discounts, and other consumer marketing practices are OK |
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Medical Massage |
Wellness Massage |