Im starting this thread to get opinions on sports massage as a stand alone profession, not to cause controversy, or to start what others would call, "a bun fight".
How relevant is sports massage these days? When it has been established that you can undertake the new QCF Level 3 sports massage qualification in just 3 days, without having prior massage experience, and the new QCF Level 4 sports massage qualification in just 65 hours, do we think that is enough?
What about what a sports masseur can do these days? Looking at these new QCF qualifications, at level 3 you cover (taken from VTCT website) effleurage; pรฉtrissage; tapotement; vibration.
At level 4 (again from VTCT website) effleurage; petrissage; tapotement; vibration; compressions; frictions, passive stretching. Do you think this is enough to enable someone doing a 'purely' sports massage course to work as a full time therapist, or do you think it would be a 'part time' role, giving the sports masseur a reputation like the one quoted on a physiotherapy forum "Furthermore, many practise massage in addition to having another job or profession. I do not know any physiotherapists who dabble in law or accounting for a bit of extra money at the weekend โ and if I did I certainly wouldnโt be hiring them".
Do you think this makes us look more, or less, professional?
Im really interested in this because, as a sports therapist, I have been trained in sports massage, plus lots of additional skills that even physiotherapists dont learn on their degrees, enabling me to deal with most musculo-skeletal problems without the need to refer on. The amount of sports massage I do in a week I can count on one hand, and certainly would not be able to live off my earnings if that was all I could offer.
Is sports massage a 'stepping stone', to sports therapy, or is anyone making a decent living from it, and if so, did you have to undertake additional courses and learn new skills to do so? Or, if you are earning a good living, was your course one of the 'old style' sports massage courses, that covered pretty much everything in sports therapy, or one of these new qualifications, that teach what amounts to the very basic massage techniques?
If you did one of the 'old style' sports massage courses, what do you think of the new qualifications that are now being offered?
How relevant is sports massage these days? When it has been established that you can undertake the new QCF Level 3 sports massage qualification in just 3 days, without having prior massage experience, and the new QCF Level 4 sports massage qualification in just 65 hours, do we think that is enough?
What about what a sports masseur can do these days? Looking at these new QCF qualifications, at level 3 you cover (taken from VTCT website) effleurage; pรฉtrissage; tapotement; vibration.
At level 4 (again from VTCT website) effleurage; petrissage; tapotement; vibration; compressions; frictions, passive stretching. Do you think this is enough to enable someone doing a 'purely' sports massage course to work as a full time therapist, or do you think it would be a 'part time' role, giving the sports masseur a reputation like the one quoted on a physiotherapy forum "Furthermore, many practise massage in addition to having another job or profession. I do not know any physiotherapists who dabble in law or accounting for a bit of extra money at the weekend โ and if I did I certainly wouldnโt be hiring them".
Do you think this makes us look more, or less, professional?
Im really interested in this because, as a sports therapist, I have been trained in sports massage, plus lots of additional skills that even physiotherapists dont learn on their degrees, enabling me to deal with most musculo-skeletal problems without the need to refer on. The amount of sports massage I do in a week I can count on one hand, and certainly would not be able to live off my earnings if that was all I could offer.
Is sports massage a 'stepping stone', to sports therapy, or is anyone making a decent living from it, and if so, did you have to undertake additional courses and learn new skills to do so? Or, if you are earning a good living, was your course one of the 'old style' sports massage courses, that covered pretty much everything in sports therapy, or one of these new qualifications, that teach what amounts to the very basic massage techniques?
If you did one of the 'old style' sports massage courses, what do you think of the new qualifications that are now being offered?