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massage therapy journal
mtj
keeping you in touch.

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Reaching More
While Smith and Morien saw success as well, they’re
ready to up the ante. “I’m excited with the results,”
Morien says, “But I’m also a scientist and, therefore,
cautious. I’d like a greater sample size for a more
robust effect.” They hope to return next year, with more
massage therapists, if possible, working on more
children.
Smith wants more massage therapists on board in general.
“We do not have enough trained therapists right now to
handle the burn population,” she says. She says that
therapists will likely find the work tremendously
satisfying.
“For me, as a therapist, to be able to work with burn
survivors, or anyone with traumatic scarring, to
acknowledge where they are in the process and introduce
appropriate touch—well, I can’t explain the feeling I
have after a session—I’m just so full ,”
Smith says. “They realize that it’s OK—that they’re
OK—and they start to accept themselves more.”
Garrison says that, as the kids at Camp Amigo proved,
touch can be so much more than skin deep. “I’ve found
that the psychological side is as important as the
physical. You start to accept that your body may look
different, but you’re still lovable and worthy of touch,
and that it doesn’t have to hurt. For me, it’s very
transcendental. I heal as much as they heal.”
Clare La Plante is a freelance writer based in Evanston, Illinois. She is a regular
contributor to mtj and her work has also appeared in a number of national business publications. Clare
is also the author of Wall Street on a Shoestring. (Avon Books, 1998).
with Annie Morien, PhD, PA-C,LMT, Nancy
Keeney Smith, NCTMB & Diane
Garrison, BA, LMT
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