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Teaching Pathology from the

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Teaching Pathology from the Ruth Werner President, Massage Therapy Foundation Author, A Massage Therapist s Guide to Pathology Recipient, 2005 Teacher of the Year Award – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Pathology from the


1
  • Teaching Pathology from the
  • Ruth Werner
  • President, Massage Therapy Foundation
  • Author, A Massage Therapists Guide to Pathology
  • Recipient, 2005 Teacher of the Year Award
  • Wernerworkshops_at_ruthwerner.com

2
Why Develop Curriculum on Pathology?
  • Required by
  • COMTA, other accrediting agencies
  • Some state licensing boards
  • NCBTMB

3
Why Teach Pathology?
  • Public Safety Why do people get massage?
  • AMTA 2012 Massage Profession Research Report says
    of the 18 of US adults who got massage in 2011
  • 44 for medical reasons
  • 30 for stress
  • 12 for pampering

4
Why Get Massage?, cont.
  • So about 74 for health and/or wellness
  • 37.9 million people had a massage in 2011
  • 170,500,000 sessions delivered
  • (about 4.5 sessions per person)

5
Massage Locations
6
More Massage Locations
  • 1 each (about 400,000) in
  • Workplace
  • Student clinic
  • Hospital
  • Alternative therapy clinic

7
Massage Therapy in Policy
  • ACA mandates a place for integrative medicine for
    health and wellness
  • NCCAM
  • Recognizes massage as part of integrative
    medicine
  • Requires that IM licensed providers be
    research-literate
  • It is our job to prepare MTs to be ready to take
    part in this new/ continuing reality

8
So
  • About 400,000 people get massage in a student
    clinic (under our care) each year
  • Massage is being used as health care more than as
    self-indulgence including in spa and resort
    settings
  • Are we educating students to be health care
    providers?

9
What Goes in a Pathology Curriculum?
  • Understanding what issues impact choices for
    bodywork and safety
  • Critical thinking the answer is always it
    depends our students must determine what it
    depends on
  • Palpatory and visual signs of caution
  • Medications (new field, under-studied)
  • Skills to get more information (research
    literacy!)

10
Finding More Information
  • Print resources about MT and Pathology
  • Werner
  • Salvo
  • Premkumar
  • Wible, Persad (MT and pharmacology)

11
Finding More Information
  • Electronic Resources About MT and Pathology
  • In general look for .gov, .edu rather than .com
  • Beware of advertisements hiding as good
    information
  • Wikipedia can be a good starting place, but not a
    good ending place
  • Medscape.com, emedicine.com
  • Mayo.com
  • NIH.gov
  • Subheads for type of condition
  • CDC.gov
  • Scholar.google.com edits out most commercial
    sites

12
Finding More Information
  • Trade Journals
  • Massage Therapy Journal
  • Massage and Bodywork
  • Massage Magazine
  • Massage Today
  • They all have columns on pathology and research,
    with the added benefit that they are more current
    than textbooks and written by MTs

13
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14
Beyond Objectives all the way to IMPACT
  • critical thinking
  • Weigh risks and benefits to make choices for a
    safe and effective session and treatment
    strategy
  • Communication
  • Be able to have an informed conversation with the
    client and his/her health care team
  • Which systems are affected
  • What is the prognosis
  • What are common treatment options
  • Where does massage fit/ what does the research
    say?

15
Troubleshooting Pathology Classes
  • What doesnt work
  • It feels dark and hopeless
  • It doesnt seem pertinent
  • Its just a big information dump
  • Its too technical
  • Its too personal
  • Its too hard to fit in between courses after
    AP, before student clinic
  • Taught by multiple people
  • Taught by non-MTs, who have no sense of context
  • Its too hard to discern what to cover and what
    to let go

16
How Do We Teach Pathology Well?
  • Pathology teachers need to
  • Focus as much (or more) on the bodys capacity
    for healing as we do on the process of illness
    this frames a context for bodywork as a
    therapeutic intervention, working to create an
    environment conducive to positive change
  • Discuss people who live with conditions with
    respect and appreciation
  • (Humor has a place here too)
  • Instill the fact that life is an open-book test
  • NO ONE can remember it all (including the
    teacher)
  • Plus which, information changes
  • Thats why you need to be able to look stuff up!
  • Remember what it felt like to be overwhelmed with
    information

17
In the Delivery
  • Review pertinent AP (this is building the house
    of cards)
  • Discuss what happens when certain cards
    (functions) are removed (interrupted)

18
For Each Topic
  • Cover at least
  • Definition
  • Etiology (briefly!)
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Conclude from that information
  • Massage benefits
  • Massage risks
  • How to maximize benefits, minimize risks

19
In the Best of All Possible Worlds Add
  • What does the research say about massage and ___?

20
This gets us to
  • critical thinking
  • Weigh risks and benefits to make choices for a
    safe and effective session and treatment
    strategy
  • Communication
  • Be able to have an informed conversation with the
    client and his/her health care team
  • Which systems are affected
  • What is the prognosis
  • What are common treatment options
  • Where does massage fit/ what does the research
    say?

21
Herpes Simplex
  • Viral infection leading to painful blisters on
    the skin
  • Oral, genital, other
  • Type 1 v. Type 2 no longer a significant issue
  • Incidence
  • Who knows?
  • Genital herpes 60?
  • Oral herpes 80?

22
Herpes Simplex, cont.
  • Primary and recurrent herpes
  • Virus is never expelled
  • Communicability
  • Virus is stable on surfaces outside a host
  • Can spread from one part of the body to another
  • Can spread during prodromic stage

23
Herpes Simplex, cont.
  • Types of herpes
  • Oral
  • Genital
  • Whitlow
  • Gladiatorum
  • Others
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Tingly, itchy during prodromic stage
  • Painful blisters on a red base
  • Scabbing after acute phase (less contagious)

24
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28
Herpes Simplex, cont.
  • Complications
  • Secondary infection
  • Increased risk of contracting, spreading HIV/AIDS
  • Vaginally delivered babies
  • Treatment
  • Antivirals to shorten episode (not prevent)
  • Research
  • Nothing on humans with herpes about massage
    therapy

29
Herpes Simplex, cont.
  • Massage?
  • Risks? (How to eliminate them?)
  • Benefits? (How to maximize them?)
  • Reschedule during outbreaks, prodromic stage
  • Avoid hands?
  • Isolate linens if exposed
  • Be careful of spreading from therapist to client!

30
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31
Strategizing Classroom Content
  • Prioritize
  • Discuss the most common conditions
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Arterial side hypertension, atherosclerosis, etc
  • Venous side DVT, PE
  • Types of cancer
  • Skin, lung, colorectal, breast, prostate
  • Regional issues
  • WNV, Lyme, etc

32
Prioritizing, continued
  • Discuss the conditions most influenced by touch
  • Contagious conditions
  • (especially of the skin demystify these!)
  • Public health issues
  • HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, TB
  • Fluid management diseases
  • Kidney and liver dysfunction
  • Diabetes
  • Musculoskeletal conditions
  • Coordinate with other courses

33
Use Lots of Tools!
  • The emphasis is on interaction with the material
  • Draw pictures
  • Use videos
  • Invite visitors
  • Assign projects

34
You cant cover everything so
  • Empower students to get their own information
    they should be able to provide the basic things
    you cover in class
  • Homework has a place here too ensure that
    students are interacting with content NOT covered
    in class time.

35
Student Projects in Pathology
  • Focus on critical thinking and communication
    skills
  • Assign a research paper
  • on a students choice of topic
  • on your choice of topic
  • (beware of plagiarism it is a difficult issue)
  • Assign a spoken presentation
  • Warning students are not teachers. These can be
    boring to sit through, and may turn off the rest
    of the class
  • Interview someone who lives with a condition
  • This can also spill over into a research literacy
    project
  • Find an article on the topic (or you can provide
    one)
  • Critique it
  • Describe how to apply findings in practice

36
Thank You!
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