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Consumer Edition March 2006 | Vol. 7, No. 3
Hello, e-touch reader! As you know, massage therapy is growing rapidly and its influence is reaching farther every day. Many top companies are now offering massage for their employees because they find it brings many benefits such as increased productivity, reduced stress and lower health-care costs. Does your company offer it? Read more about this trend in this month’s feature by Jean Ives’s, “Massage Is in Business.” If you are looking for a qualified massage therapist in your area to contact about workplace massage, use AMTA's Find a Massage Therapist® national locator service! Enjoy the issue! ~The Editors E-mail: etouch@amtamassage.org To ensure the delivery of e-touch E-mails to your inbox, please take a moment to add etouch@amtamassage.org to your E-Mail Address Book or Safe List. NOTE: Internet browsers and E-mail programs differ widely. If Web and/or E-mail links from this issue are not highlighted on your screen, simply copy and paste them into your browser’s address line or E-mail form as appropriate. MASSAGE IS IN BUSINESSBy Jean Ives More and more employees are lying down on the job – and this makes their employers happy. Workplace massage, both table and chair, is a growing trend at some of the most highly regarded companies. In 2003, Massage Therapy Journal (mtj) conducted its own informal, yet extensive, survey to find out more about companies that offer workplace massage. In consultation with Marilyn Kier, who operates a successful workplace massage firm for corporate customers, an eight-item survey questionnaire was developed. The survey was mailed to 500 large companies, including those selected by Fortune magazine as the “100 Best Companies to Work For.” Because of the small sample, the results of the mtj survey are not able to statistically represent the population of all businesses. But, when taking the responses from the mtj survey and comparing them to other surveys on the topic of massage in business, there are vast overlaps in results. Based on this, it is clear that massage is in "business." When mtj compared the responses from Fortune’s “100 Best Companies to Work For” with other companies’ responses, it found that massage is an employee benefit at 90 percent of the “best” companies, versus 66 percent of those not on the “best” list. Working Mother magazine, in its 18th annual survey of the “100 Best Companies for Working Mothers,” reported that 77 percent of the “best” companies offer therapeutic massages, versus 11 percent nationwide. The 11 percent figure is based on a 2003 benefits survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management Foundation. Among the many motivations behind these programs is the belief that complementary and alternative (CAM) therapies, such as massage, might help reduce health costs. MASSAGE MIGHT REDUCE HEALTH COSTS Kathryn Bishopric is manager of counseling services at Baptist Health, ranked 18th in Fortune’s 2005 “100 Best” companies. Bishopric, who directs the behavioral and collaborative medicine program under which workplace massage resides, firmly believes that massage therapy can be expected to lower employers’ health-care costs. “Baptist Health is self-insured, so we have a really strong interest in wellness,” Bishopric says. “We promote anything that helps employees take care of themselves. Studies clearly show that if employees are healthy, they’ll use less in health insurance benefits and be more productive.”
Another company that echoes the belief that workplace massage is an important part of its overall health and fitness program is S.C. Johnson, of Racine, Wisconsin, who moved to seventh-place rank in Fortune’s “100 Best” in 2005. This company’s workplace massage program is more than 10 years old, and is extended to retirees and to employees’ families as well. Spokesperson Therese Van Ryne says, “We are seeing more and more managers who recognize the benefits of offering massage to employees and thus are picking up half the cost. This seems to work especially well in departments such as customer service, where the employees deal with a lot of stress.” OUTSOURCED MASSAGE Many large corporations have a commitment to employee wellness but choose to collaborate with fitness centers and wellness firms rather than develop and staff their own programs. TimeOut Services, based in San Jose, California, serves high-tech companies such as Cisco Systems, Yahoo! and KLA-Tencor, and Health Fitness Corp. counts among its clients such recognizable corporate names as Federal Express, Best Buy, General Electric, Allstate, Hewlett-Packard, Underwriters Laboratories, Texas Instruments and Verizon. “As companies continue the trend of asking employees to do more with less, we see a parallel trend in the demand for massage therapy rising,” says Sarah Nichols, national director of program development for Health Fitness Corp. “Companies that never offered massage in the past are asking for it, and companies that already offer it are expanding it.” ALREADY PART OF STAFF Many hospitals, which already have massage therapists on staff, include massage therapy as a benefit to its employees. Josie Houtenbrink, a licensed massage therapist at Baptist Health’s South Miami Hospital, likes the fact that working in a hospital setting usually means giving massages to nursing staff, physical therapists and physicians. About 50 percent of her clientele are employees. “One benefit I get is the satisfaction of giving massages to people whose stressful and strenuous jobs really make them appreciate massage,” Houtenbrink says. “The other is that they go back to their jobs as proponents that their patients should all get massages.” INDIVIDUAL CONTRACTORS But not every company that offers workplace massage has a ready-made staff or can hire a specialty firm to handle its program. Many contract directly with individual massage therapists, such as at JCPenney. Lisa Horn, fitness center manager in the medical unit of JCPenney’s Human Resources Division, stresses that it is the employee—not the company—who pays the full fee for his or her massage, but the company makes it available and promotes it by providing a massage room, advertising it in company communications and scheduling appointments through the fitness center. Massage therapist Laura McManis-Hockenbury, who works at the JCPenney Fitness Center two days a week, says, “Most employees come during their lunch break and have the option of staying fully clothed or being professionally draped….It makes me feel good to know I’m sending them back to work in better shape and with information on managing their stress. It allows them to focus on their job, not on their various aches.” If massage allows employees to focus on their jobs, it seems only natural that employers should focus on massage.
Summary of mtj Workplace Study
Jean Ives is a frequent contributor to mtj. Reach her at jeanives@comcast.net. This article is adapted and updated from “Massage Is in Business,” by Jean Ives, which originally appeared in the Spring 2004 issue of mtj. DID YOU KNOW?Many top companies offer workplace massage as an employee benefit. Here are just some:
Click 'n pick: does your company offer workplace massage? Spend a few moments answering this question at the link below. It’s quick, and it’s easy! See the results in the next issue of e-touch. vote for your favorite national massage therapy awareness week ® logoPlease take a moment to place your vote for a new logo for AMTA’s National Massage Therapy Awareness Week. As a consumer of massage, your feedback is valuable to us in choosing a logo that makes the most impact on you. Click here to take the survey now! Massage Therapy q & a: How does massage therapy affect the body? Q: How does massage therapy affect the body? A: Massage affects the body as a whole. To understand how massage therapy works, some of the physiological effects of massage need to be briefly examined.Massage is known to increase the circulation of blood and flow of lymph. The direct mechanical effect of rhythmically applied manual pressure and movement used in massage can dramatically increase the rate of blood flow. Also, the stimulation of nerve receptors causes the blood vessels (by reflex action) to dilate, which also facilitates blood flow. A milky white fluid called lymph carries impurities and waste away from the tissues and passes through gland-like structures spaced throughout the lymphatic system that act as filtering valves. The lymph does not circulate as the blood does, so its movement depends largely on the squeezing effect of muscle contractions. Consequently, inactive people fail to stimulate lymph flow. On the other hand, the stimulation caused by vigorous activity can be outstripped by the increased waste produced by that activity. Massage can dramatically aid the movement of lymph in either case. For the whole body to be healthy, the sum of its parts -- the cells -- must be healthy. The individual cells of the body are dependent on an abundant supply of blood and lymph because these fluids supply nutrients and oxygen and carry away wastes and toxins. So, it is easy to understand why good circulation is so important to our health and why massage can be so beneficial for the entire body due to its effect on circulation alone. Click here to read more about how massage affects the body.
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