Power of m squared
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Does anyone believe that physical/physio therapy has any advaneforum.xxxes over massage therapy for most soft tissue pathologies? If so, which conditions would physical therapy provide superior therapeutic results? A trained remedial massage therapist would expect to see clients with conditions such as headache, migraine, whiplash, carpal tunnel syndrome, tennis elbow, thoracic outlet syndrome, achilles tendinitis and many more such problems. Perhaps more people will consult with a physical/physio therapist for the same kind of problems. Since PT's receive very little training in massage therapy, how are they capable of effectively treating such conditions, which in my opinion benefit most greatly from massage?It's my understanding that PT's will use some type of machine (be it ultrasound, laser, interferential etc.) together with a prescription of stretching and strengthening exercises to treat the problems that massage therapists treat entirely with their hands. [A well trained massage therapist should also be able to prescribe such exercises] Am i correct?If so, has it been established that these machines offer superior therapeutic value?I'm also curious to know why the PT course is so long given that that they don't spend much time at all learning how to massage effectively. How do they pad out the course so much?Thoughts?