|
Richmond
Convention Most Successful AMTA Convention Ever
The success of AMTA's 2003 National
Convention in Richmond, VA, could be measured in two visible ways: the
all-time high of 958 attendees, and the 127 booths in the Exhibit
Marketplace. In addition, a number of exhibitors commented that they
had to order additional inventory flown in overnight after Thursday nights
opening event in the exhibit hall. 60 years of professional service to
massage therapists and their clients helped to make this so. See you
in Nashville October 6-10, 2004.
Members can view the photo album in the Members Only Section. (password
required)
Successful CVOP
In July, chapter
volunteers’ suggestions, National Board’s guidance, and many hours of
volunteer and staff planning successfully culminated in 72 members from 48
chapters attending AMTA’s first Chapter Volunteer Orientation Program (CVOP)
in Evanston, Illinois. During the
three-day span, participants heard presentations from AMTA experts about the
member experience, association basics, and legal and financial obligations;
toured AMTA’s National Office; and participated in facilitated
discussions on chapter relations basics, volunteer development, financial
discussion and board development .
Legislation passed in
Kentucky and Arizona
The states of Kentucky
and Arizona approved massage laws in 2003. Kentucky Gov. Paul E. Patton
signed H.B. 268 on March 12. The law went into effect on June 24.
The timeline of the
bill was fairly brief; only 13 months went by from the time initial survey
information was gathered to the signing of the bill, and just seven months
passed from the time of the first coalition meeting to the bill’s signing.
S.B. 1103 was signed and made law by Arizona
Gov. Janet Napolitano on May 12, making Arizona the 33rd state (plus the
District of Columbia) to regulate massage therapy. The House of
Representatives added an amendment, approved by the Senate, that allows for
the massage board, by rule, to increase the education hours requirement as
of July 1, 2005. Licensing will start out with a 500-hour requirement, but
this approved amendment creates an avenue for the hours to increase.
Since 1994, 14 states
have passed laws to regulate massage—twice as many as in the previous
10-year span (1984-1993).
AMTA representative
appointed to IOM committee
In May, AMTA was
invited to appoint an on-going liaison, as a representative of the massage
therapy profession, to attend all of the meetings of the Institute of
Medicine Committee on CAM Therapies. AMTA sent member Claude Gagnon
(WI) to the June meeting of the IOM committee for a special presentation on
regulatory issues and massage therapy. AMTA Foundation President John
Balletto was appointed AMTA’s ongoing representative.
AMTA supplies detailed description of the massage therapy profession for AMA
directory of healthcare professions
In response to a
request from the American Medical
Association, AMTA provided an overview of the massage therapy profession and
a description of AMTA to the American Medical Association’s Health
Professions Career & Education Directory. This directory lists
occupational descriptions, employment characteristics and information on
educational programs for more than 60 healthcare professions. This is
the first time they have listed massage therapists.
AMTA meets with NCBTMB, ABMP, AOBTA and COMTA to discuss common interests in
massage legislation
In August, AMTA took
part in a cooperative meeting to explore areas of common interest among
several stakeholders in the profession surrounding regulatory and
legislative issues in massage therapy. It was the first time AMTA sat
down to discuss points of view and explore possible areas of common ground
with the Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals (ABMP), the American
Organization for Bodywork Therapies of AsiaTM (AOBTA), the
National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and BodyworkSM
(NCBTMBSM) and the Commission on Massage Therapy AccreditationCM
(COMTACM).
AMTA collaborates with AHA on study that
shows massage is most-used CAM therapy in hospitals
After seeing in past
surveys that massage is used by hospitals more than other complementary and
alternative medicine (CAM) therapies, the American Hospital Association
(AHA) asked AMTA to provide questions related to massage use for a new
survey of CAM use in hospitals. Of the 1,007 hospitals that responded
to the survey, 269 reported using CAM therapies, and 220 reported using
massage therapy.
AMTA distributes massage poster to more than 5,000 medical offices
A new poster about the
benefits of massage has been distributed to medical group practices.
The poster, produced by AMTA, is designed for physician's exam rooms, and
invites patients to discuss massage therapy with their doctors. The
11x17 posters were distributed starting in September. In addition to
the national mailings, members also purchased varied amounts of the posters
and distributed them to local physicians in their area. To date, over
13,000 posters have been distributed to healthcare professionals and human
resource managers for posting in their offices. Additional mailings
are planned for 2004. The program has been a huge success as repeat
orders are coming in.
Media coverage of
massage continues to climb
AMTA’s promotions of
massage to various audiences have continued to generate interest from the
public and the news media. In the year ending February 2003, there
were 13,660 articles published and reports show there will be well over
14,000 articles about massage published in the year ending February 2004!
AMTA’s news release for NMTAW 2003 about the results of recent massage
surveys was published in its entirety by at least 3 medical news weeklies as
important healthcare news that would be of interest to healthcare
professionals. Various consumer publications, including online news
services, and some broadcast media outlets also ran stories that quoted the
surveys. It was clear from all of these media outlets that information
about massage from AMTA is viewed as important.
NMTAW Theme a Big Success
AMTA’s theme of
“Relieve Pain with Massage” for National Massage Therapy Awareness Week 2004
was a big success. Relief of pain is an issue of interest to consumers
and healthcare professionals. The timing was perfect as the American
Medical Association began release in 2003 of a series of continuing
education modules on pain relief that includes relief from
non-pharmacological therapies. AMTA distributed a special poster
called “Talk to Your Doctor About Massage Therapy” to more than 5,200
medical group practices in October.
AMTA Web site wins 3 awards for service to consumers and the healthcare
community
Each year since its on-line debut in
August, 1997 AMTA has worked to improve it's Web site and the content.
In 2003 AMTA revised the entire Members Section of the Web site. This
work has paid off with the awarding of A 2003 Web Award from the Web
Marketing Association, a 2003-2004 Golden Web Award from the
International Association of Web Masters & Designers, and a 2003 eHealthcare
Leadership Gold Award for having the "Best Overall Internet Site" among
healthcare associations and professional societies. 1200 Web sites
were judged on 56 points in the eHealthcare competition. AMTA has been
at work re-designing the Consumer Section of the Web site and will unveil
that in early 2004.
|