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The American Massage Therapy Association (AMTA)
is the oldest and largest international, member-driven organization
representing the massage therapy profession.
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AMTA was founded in 1943.
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AMTA has more than 56,000 members in
27 countries.
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AMTA has chapters in all 50 states and the District
of Columbia.
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AMTA is governed by an elected
National Board of Directors.
AMTA plays an important role in
ensuring high standards and ethical behavior in the practice of massage
therapy.
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AMTA initiated the creation, in 1992,
of the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and
Bodywork (NCBTMB), which is formally recognized by the National
Commission of Certifying Agencies. The National Certification Exam has
become the standard for licensure used by most of the 33 states that
regulate massage, to measure a competent and qualified practitioner.
More than 60,000 massage therapists now have National Certification.
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AMTA develops and re-examines
guidelines for the ethical practice of massage to keep them current
and to reflect needs of the profession and the consumer. AMTA has a
Practice Standards document and a Code of Ethics, and is developing
behavioral guidelines for its members. Such standards help to ensure a
safe and nurturing environment for all who seek the benefits of
massage.
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The Commission on Massage Therapy
Accreditation (COMTA) was established by AMTA in 1989 to uphold AMTA’s
principles of ethics and professionalism in all phases of career
training and professional development. Operating independently, COMTA
is determining benchmarks of massage therapy education. COMTA-accredited
educational programs must demonstrate compliance with COMTA standards
by completing a comprehensive self-study, onsite observation by
external professionals and educators, and evaluation by an independent
commission.
AMTA promotes and provides for continuing education in the
profession.
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AMTA requires its Professional Members
to provide evidence of continuing education in the massage field.
Through the AMTA National Convention, conferences and workshops it
provides continuing education and networking opportunities for massage
therapists. AMTA’s educational events feature prominent researchers
and educators in the massage profession.
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AMTA’s 52 chapters provide additional
continuing-education conferences and workshops at the regional and
local levels.
AMTA is a key contributor to the
advancement of the art, science and practice of massage therapy.
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AMTA created the AMTA Foundation (a
tax-exempt, public charity) to fund massage therapy-related research,
community outreach and educational scholarships. The AMTA Foundation
has awarded more than $500,000 since its inception in 1993.
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AMTA provided funding toward a pilot
study on the use of massage therapy for pain management, directed by
David M. Eisenberg, M.D., Director of the Center for Alternative
Medicine at Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
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AMTA supports its chapters’
legislative efforts to foster a legal climate supportive of the
practice of therapeutic massage. To do this, it created a Law and
Legislation Assistance Program (LLAP) in 1992, which has distributed
more than $1.2 million to support those efforts. Since 1992, the
number of states regulating massage has grown from 17 to 33, plus
Washington, D.C.
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Through AMTA’s National Massage
Therapy Awareness Week, the last full week of October, AMTA actively
promotes therapeutic massage and the massage profession to the public,
medical professionals and health insurance companies.
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AMTA’s Web site at www.amtamassage.org provides the public with accurate information
about the benefits of massage therapy, recent research on its
efficacy, and a means to locate qualified massage therapists.
AMTA’s Find a Massage Therapist
national locator service helps consumers and medical professionals find
qualified massage therapist in their area.
AMTA’s Mission
The mission of the American Massage
Therapy Association is to serve AMTA members while advancing the. art, science and practice of massage therapy.
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