Just throwing my experience into this one.
Dazzakoh said---
As Candie has mentioned time and again, we truly only start learning after we get the basic qualification. And from what I have seen so far, when it comes to Swedish massage, I have yet to see someone in the US perform Swedish with the classical form that ITEC still insists on. So one up for ITEC there.
I trained in the US in Florida and I was trained in Swedish, Therapeutic, Sports and Remedial massage. My basic training was similar to Esalen massage I did a 625 clock program of which 350 was nothing else but hands on techniques. I have never yet found any course here in the UK that can offer the level, quality and length of course that is on offer in the US.
I have a friend who is doing an ITEC right now and it is basic, and I mean basic. It will get her started and as someone said you only start learning after you finish college. All the 5 basic element strokes are there but she has been taught a set routine... does everyone seriously want to put tapodement into a relaxation massaeg???
Too be honest you have to take into considerationthe therapist as well. I have had massages whilst living in the US from therapists whom I know have trained in states requiering 1000 hours and their massage was nothing wonderful. My neice can give a brilliant massage, she is 9 years old!!!
Also.... where I studied in Tampa there were as many massage parlours as there was state therapists, you are never going to change that, no matter what you try to do.
I have to be honest I would like it regulated purely because I am sick to death of folks doing Reiki in 2 days then doing an Indian Head massage course in 2 days and then calling themselves a massage therapist. They are giving the profession a poor image.
In saying that. I have over 1000 hours of training in MFR and Massage. I have done a Sports Therapy course with Premier Training here in Glasgow and when I try to get insurance I am only accepted on my Premiere Training qualification because they do not know how to compare my US qualification to the UK ones.
In the US a Massage Therapist is as respected as a GP, Chiro and many hospitals have Massage Therapsist, it is part of their national healthcare and can be insurance billed.
I would like that same recognisation here. That a GP will send me clients. They will not be able to do that if they dont know the standard and level of our training. I am lucky, I lhave contacted all my local GP'S and Dentist and told them what my trainign involved and I do get referrals. I have been told that they would not refer a patient to a therapist who has done 100-120 clock programe. Maybe many do refer but we need to accept that if we want to be part of the antional healthcare we need to be regulated.
Heck I found out that they are ralking about putting Personal Trainers into the NHS...... yikes..... what level of training do they have????
If you read the Massage Magazine it shows you which states are regulated and which are not. Only in those few states that have Freedom of Access Laws could someone work who was not US trained, in other words these states have no qualification requirement. You can only work, as someone previously said, as a Massage Therapist in a particular State if you have studied the minimum required ammount of hours at a registered college. Some of the states also require you to sit the national exam too.
The laws are all ove rthe place, in some parts of Canada its ony several hundered and others over 2000 hours. I know a Canadian girl who has 2300 hours of Massage training and she also does chiro adjusting to level 4 as well as other allied health modalities, so her training is not simply massage.
Whatever happens is going to happen and it wont suit everyone. If I look att he ammount of Masssage Therapists I know in the US, the UK training is simply the poor relation to what is on offer over there... it is not the be all and end all.... but we do have a way to go yet.
Dazzakoh said---
As Candie has mentioned time and again, we truly only start learning after we get the basic qualification. And from what I have seen so far, when it comes to Swedish massage, I have yet to see someone in the US perform Swedish with the classical form that ITEC still insists on. So one up for ITEC there.
I trained in the US in Florida and I was trained in Swedish, Therapeutic, Sports and Remedial massage. My basic training was similar to Esalen massage I did a 625 clock program of which 350 was nothing else but hands on techniques. I have never yet found any course here in the UK that can offer the level, quality and length of course that is on offer in the US.
I have a friend who is doing an ITEC right now and it is basic, and I mean basic. It will get her started and as someone said you only start learning after you finish college. All the 5 basic element strokes are there but she has been taught a set routine... does everyone seriously want to put tapodement into a relaxation massaeg???
Too be honest you have to take into considerationthe therapist as well. I have had massages whilst living in the US from therapists whom I know have trained in states requiering 1000 hours and their massage was nothing wonderful. My neice can give a brilliant massage, she is 9 years old!!!
Also.... where I studied in Tampa there were as many massage parlours as there was state therapists, you are never going to change that, no matter what you try to do.
I have to be honest I would like it regulated purely because I am sick to death of folks doing Reiki in 2 days then doing an Indian Head massage course in 2 days and then calling themselves a massage therapist. They are giving the profession a poor image.
In saying that. I have over 1000 hours of training in MFR and Massage. I have done a Sports Therapy course with Premier Training here in Glasgow and when I try to get insurance I am only accepted on my Premiere Training qualification because they do not know how to compare my US qualification to the UK ones.
In the US a Massage Therapist is as respected as a GP, Chiro and many hospitals have Massage Therapsist, it is part of their national healthcare and can be insurance billed.
I would like that same recognisation here. That a GP will send me clients. They will not be able to do that if they dont know the standard and level of our training. I am lucky, I lhave contacted all my local GP'S and Dentist and told them what my trainign involved and I do get referrals. I have been told that they would not refer a patient to a therapist who has done 100-120 clock programe. Maybe many do refer but we need to accept that if we want to be part of the antional healthcare we need to be regulated.
Heck I found out that they are ralking about putting Personal Trainers into the NHS...... yikes..... what level of training do they have????
If you read the Massage Magazine it shows you which states are regulated and which are not. Only in those few states that have Freedom of Access Laws could someone work who was not US trained, in other words these states have no qualification requirement. You can only work, as someone previously said, as a Massage Therapist in a particular State if you have studied the minimum required ammount of hours at a registered college. Some of the states also require you to sit the national exam too.
The laws are all ove rthe place, in some parts of Canada its ony several hundered and others over 2000 hours. I know a Canadian girl who has 2300 hours of Massage training and she also does chiro adjusting to level 4 as well as other allied health modalities, so her training is not simply massage.
Whatever happens is going to happen and it wont suit everyone. If I look att he ammount of Masssage Therapists I know in the US, the UK training is simply the poor relation to what is on offer over there... it is not the be all and end all.... but we do have a way to go yet.