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Massage therapy addresses a variety of health conditions, the most prevalent being stress-related tension. Massage has proven to be beneficial in treating cancer-related fatigue, sleep disorders, high blood pressure, diabetes, lower back pain, immunity suppression, spinal cord injury, autism, post-operative care, age-related disorders, infertility, eating disorders, smoking cessation, and depression.
Massage also provides another therapeutic component largely absent in today's world, which is touch. In 1986, the Touch Research Institute at the University of Miami published groundbreaking research on the effects of touch on premature babies. The preterm babies who experienced physical contact through being held and soothed by the nurses showed 47% greater weight gain and a six-day shorter hospital stay than the infants who were not receiving physical contact from the nurses. Is this study evidence of what affectionate touch can do spiritually, or rather what massage can do on a physiological level? Regardless, babies are not the only benefactors.Many adults have reported stress-relieving experiences on the massage table. As a therapist carefully unwinds a client's stressed and tired muscles, the therapist may very well be unwinding the taut, pent-up emotions that one does not always have time to process in the middle of the day. As studies continue to reveal the link between kinesiology and physical and emotional health, the effects of massage will be further documented. However, one needs only to experience a good massage to know it is beneficial to the body and soul.
In some cases, the practitioner may need a doctor's permission before providing services.