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Hows of Hand and Arm
Posted On 01/28/2010 22:53:59 by jianlan

Hows of Hand and Arm

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Sarah, a single woman of 19 years, is a therapist just starting out as an employee in a trendy rural salon. She only recently finished all of her training, quite excited about the prospects ahead of her. Her case, however, is quite different from that of Angela, Jill and Liz, because her injuries have not resulted from her massage schedule. Sarah has suffered a traumatic injury that has resulted in extreme permanent damage to her hand, leaving her in no doubt that her budding career as a therapist has ended before it's begun. While the nature of her injury is different, like all the others, she is left frustrated and severely disappointed that she cannot pursue the career she invested so much time in learning. Determined not to give up, Sarah has tried massaging with one hand only, but tires quickly and is not confident in treating paying clients.

What is happening in these cases?escort girl shenzhen escort girls shenzhen
RSI, Cumulative Trauma Disorders, Occupational Overuse Injuries, Work Related Upper Limb Disorders, back pain, neck pain, etc. These are common conditions that encompass many different injuries. These conditions arise for many reasons: as a massage therapist you are either at risk or already suffering because of the demands you place on your body during every treatment. And it isn't all musculoskeletally related. Demands placed on the upper limb and trunk in bodywork are analogous to those imposed on the lower limb during many sports and athletic pursuits. These 'industrial athletes' are susceptible to the same neuromuscular disorders as their 'athletic' counterparts. Unfortunately, industrial athletes do not always have the benefit of adequate training, conditioning, monitoring, and immediate post-injury care.

The risks stem from issues as simple as posture, rest, and exercise. Poor posture throws off the body's balance and makes the wrong muscle groups work in the wrong ways for the wrong reasons. This leads to the obvious back and neck pain. However, poor posture hinders breathing and the nerves and blood vessels running into the arms, making the arms susceptible to the various conditions named above. The lack of rest from a demanding schedule or client load, especially working with poor posture, as well as use of excessive force to appease the pressure-loving client almost guarantees trouble. Even the stress of a large workload, especially if you are not the one in control of your schedule, contributes to these disorders. Simply performing over two hours of repetitive hand movement per day is enough to put a therapist into the risk category, but what therapist does not identify with at least half of the other risk factors mentioned here?

Tightness, discomfort, stiffness, soreness, or burning in hands, wrists, fingers, neck, or back; tingling, coldness, or numbness, or a feeling of heaviness in the limbs or head; clumsiness or lack of coordination or control; pain that wakes you up at night – especially in the early morning hours; frequent need to self-massage; pain; these are all symptoms of a larger, more serious problem. Of course, these conditions aren't always painful. Those famous therapist 'clicky wrists' are a sign of trouble.

The Whys and Hows of Hand and Arm Pain
Repetitive movements that disturb the delicate balance of muscles, tendons and ligaments in the hands cause disorders as previously mentioned. Delayed-onset muscle soreness is most likely caused by structural damage in skeletal muscle after excessive use and may take as long as 12 weeks to repair – therapists don't have this option.

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