The school I attended was a "School of Medical Massage Therapy" in Lebanon, Ohio. We learned techniques for treating tmj, whiplash, thoracic outlet syndrome, sprains/strains, fractures, etc along with therapeutic work for other complaints.
Our instructors stressed that whether "they" liked it or not, those folks who sought to designate massage as "medical" vs "therapeutic" [which included the PhD and the physician who owned the school] were deluding themselves if "they" thought the 2 ideas could be completely disassociated with one another. Medical massage is therapeutic and therapeutic massage can be medical.
Stress is a medical condition, so is a sprain/strain condition, a whiplash injury, etc. I was taught to treat all of them with the appropriate massage techniques. To the instructors, and to me, the only designation that really counted was the diagnostic code provided by a physician to the LMT, when necessary, for insurance claims to be processed. The work didn't, and, for me, doesn't change just because of the the Rx or diagnostic code. What I learned and what I still practice are as medical as they are therapeutic. They cannot be divorced from one another just because there are now schools that claim the education you will receive from their curriculum is somehow superior to that of other schools because they have tacked the word "medical" into the name of the school and/or its curriculum. The "proof in the pudding" [as Grandma would say] is in what you are actually able to do when you get the heck through school and get out in the real world.
To my way of thinking it's just one more devisive way to splinter the profession into groups of "I'm better than you are because I can do..... better than you can....." If you want to do spa work, great, be the best you can at that, and more power to you. If you want to do work with people with physical concerns, find the school that teaches you that and go for it!!! There are schools for whatever you want to learn. Visit the ones in and around Columbus [since I see you are in Central Ohio] and see what their curriculums are like. Visit the student clinics and see what kind of work the students are capable of as they near the end of their formal schooling.... by my count there are at least 3 schools within Columbus proper ..... American Institute of Alternative Medicine, Columbus State Community College, and Central Ohio School of Massage.... Investigate schools outside of your area to see if their curriculums suit your needs and vision for your future better. Check out the school at Hocking Hills Community College, or the schools in the Akron/Canton area, the school in Lima, or near Bowling Green, Cincinnati, or even Lebanon. There are a lot of really good schools in the state...... check them out personally, and then take a look at their statistics with the medical board for the number of graduates that successfully pass the boards each year....... you will find the school you want if you just look around and explore what each school has to offer rather than looking for a school whose name sounds like it is better than another's.
Good luck in your search.
J