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Gathering Evidence
Smith finished the week inspired. She returned to
Gainesville and told Dean about her camp experiences.
They took their “What if” game up a notch: What if they
could prove that massage helps these kids? As a nurse,
Dean understood that the medical profession loves
concrete proof. “I wondered how we could put the results
in language that the doctors would understand and
appreciate,” she says.
So Smith began planning the Camp Amigo Project—a study
to prove that massage helps burn survivors. Diane
Garrison, BA, LMT, a student at the Florida School of
Massage and a burn survivor, jumped on board. She had
grant writing experience and helped Smith to complete an
already partially written grant, which was submitted to
the Massage Therapy Foundation. The foundation awarded
the Camp Amigo Project a grant of approximately $5,000
in 2006.
Two other Florida School of Massage students, Rachel
Torres and Dana Rubin, joined the team as well. Smith
then combined forces with Annie Morien, PhD, a physician
assistant, licensed massage therapist and part-time
instructor at the Florida School of Massage. Morien’s
research interest, coincidentally, was keloid and burn
scars. She helped them with the language and research
protocol of the study, and with writing up the results
for—they hoped—publication in a scientific journal.
Together, Morien and Smith wrote an objective: “To
determine if therapeutic massage intervention produced
clinically meaningful changes in range of motion and
keloid size/shape in children ages 8 to 18.”
The four therapists—Morien stayed at home and would
receive the results upon their return—headed to Camp
Amigo in July 2006. In the medical cabin they shared
with the other medical personnel, Smith and Rubin
massaged eight children three to five times a week for
approximately 30 minutes, while Torres and Garrison
measured the range of motion, mood and circumference of
scars. (The control was the same child but a different
area of the body.)
They ran into a few kinks. First, they realized that
scar circumference was tough to measure in camp
conditions. Sun, for example, can cause keloids to
pucker. Mood was difficult to measure as well. “Because
the kids were at camp, they came in a happy mood and
left in a happy mood,” says Morien.
However, range of motion was a slam dunk. “Range of
motion was significantly increased from the first day of
camp to the last day,” says Morien. In fact, she was
surprised at how quickly it increased.
The non-clinical results also wowed Smith and her
colleagues. “There was one little girl who had been
burned in a house fire—they were using candles in the
home because they didn’t have electricity—and this
little girl tried to save several siblings,” says Smith.
In doing so, she received burns over 85 percent of her
body, including her face and hands.
“She didn’t want to be touched,” says Smith. “She was
very guarded about anyone getting into her personal
space.” However, by the end of the week, Smith says, the
young girl was complaining because she had to get off
the massage table.
The tangible results were two-to-three degree change in
range of motion each day. The intangibles were great,
too. “What a wonderful turnaround! It seemed to make a
difference not just in the scars, but in her heart
healing, and in her body image and perception of
herself.”
For Garrison, who had been the same age as many of the
children at camp when she had been burned over 65
percent of her body at age 11, going to camp was a
revelation. “I went to massage school to specifically
help other burn survivors,” she says, but didn’t know
where to find them. “Once burn survivors are through
with critical [care], they just kind of disappear,” she
says. “I thought, ‘This is my tribe.’ I’ve been looking
for this my whole life,” she says.
Garrison was thrilled with the results. “You kind of
feel that you are your deformities, your scars,” she
says. “And when somebody touches you lovingly where you
have horrible scars that others are repelled by, it goes
beyond anything that you may be doing physically to the
skin…that’s what these
kids were saying.”
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