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A Table That's Stable

Putting Low Price Before High Quality Can Cost You Big

By Amanda Nevels

Massage Therapis Linda Gutowski didn't opt for an inexpensive table. Yet, she has had the unfortunate experience of having a client fall to the floor during treatment.

“He was a large football player in his youth and just generally of a thick build,” she says. When Gutowski asked the client to turn over, he shifted his body with a bit of a jump, placing most of his weight on the opposite end of the table. “The legs on my side [of the table] came off the floor slightly, and off he rolled.”

Gutowski was horrified, not only about the fact that her client might have gotten hurt, but also that he was left completely naked and stunned on the floor. “I immediately lifted the sheet over my line of sight and asked him if he was okay,” she remembers. Thankfully, he was, and they were able to laugh about it—after the fact.

Letting a client sit directly on the crease of a portable massage table is another way to cause undue pressure, potentially resulting in the table buckling under a client, warns nurse and massage therapist Dianne Polseno, president of Cortiva Institute in Boston, Massachusetts. “That is the most vulnerable point [of your table] and your client can easily fall through,” she explains. “It happened to me once, and the client was humiliated... it is an experience I wish I could forget.”

These stories drive home the importance of buying dependable equipment. Without a reliable table, the safety of both you and your clients is at risk. The following are some suggestions from table manufacturers and massage therapists to help take the guesswork out of purchasing a massage table.


Crunching the Numbers

Jeff Riach, owner and founder of Oakworks, likes to use a per-use cost analysis to help put purchasing a massage table into perspective. An established massage therapist averaging approximately 1,000 massages per year will have completed 5,000 massages in a five-year period. If the therapist paid $500 for her table, the cost per massage would average 10 cents. Provided the table withstands the test of time, this

When you look at it this way, buying a lower-quality table doesn't make sense, says Riach.


Table Basics

WIDTH: Get a table that is not so wide that it ends up hurting the massage therapist using it, but also a table not so narrow that the client is uncomfortable and feels like he is going to fall off. While a narrower 24-inch table may be easier for a massage therapist to work with, it may not be comfortable for the client. A table 28 inches to 32 inches wide is a safe bet.

ERGONOMICS: Make sure the face cradle is comfortable for the client and easy to adjust. You can undo all the neck work you just

ACCESSORIES:

  • a good stool. You should purchase one that is adjustable and comfortable for the work you may do while seated.
  • a bolster. You should always have at least one bolster with you at all times.
  • a carrying case with shoulder straps and handles. This product makes toting your table around easier.
  • a table cart. You may want to have a table cart on hand if you need to travel long distances or climb stairs.
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