Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university

Abstract Background Attitudes and beliefs about massage therapy have been explored among health professionals and health profession students, but not for undergraduate preprofessional health sciences students. Methods This cross-sectional survey sought to determine pre-professional health students’...

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Main Authors: Niki Munk, Abby Church, Donya Nemati, Samantha Zabel, Amber R. Comer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies
Subjects:
CAM
CIM
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-020-03002-6
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spelling doaj-e777a51f484541a4a8d247b5ee09c4132020-11-25T03:36:42ZengBMCBMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies2662-76712020-07-012011810.1186/s12906-020-03002-6Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. universityNiki Munk0Abby Church1Donya Nemati2Samantha Zabel3Amber R. Comer4Department of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University – IUPUIDepartment of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University – IUPUIDepartment of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University – IUPUIDepartment of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University – IUPUIDepartment of Health Sciences, School of Health and Human Sciences, Indiana University – IUPUIAbstract Background Attitudes and beliefs about massage therapy have been explored among health professionals and health profession students, but not for undergraduate preprofessional health sciences students. Methods This cross-sectional survey sought to determine pre-professional health students’ attitudes and perceptions toward massage therapy and determine the extent demographic variables such as age, gender, race, along with lifetime massage experience are associated with neutral/negative perceptions. Results N = 129 undergraduate students completed the Attitudes Toward Massage scale and 7 supplemental items pertaining to sexuality and therapist gender preference along with questions regarding lifetime massage utilization. Prevalence of massage therapy utilization was 35.6% (lifetime) and 18.6% (last 12-months). Overall, positive attitudes towards massage therapy was observed with participants reporting massage experience expressing more positive massage attitudes (lifetime; p = 0.0081, the past 12 months; p = 0.0311). Participants with no massage experience were more likely to report neutral/negative attitudes toward massage (p = 0.04). Men were more likely to prefer their massage therapist to be of the opposite sex (38.9%) compared to women (2.1%) (p = < 0.0001). Men were less confident than women in their concern of becoming sexually aroused during massage (p = 0.0001) and in the belief that massage is sexually arousing (p = 0.048). Both genders expressed comfort with female and/or male massage therapists, but if given a choice, both prefer a female massage therapist. Conclusions Undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students have generally positive attitudes towards massage therapy however more research is needed regarding implicit gender bias and/or preferences. This work should inform future research designs examining the impact of attitudes and beliefs on patient referrals to massage therapy.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-020-03002-6ATOM scaleCAMCIMGender biasMassage therapyProfessional touch
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niki Munk
Abby Church
Donya Nemati
Samantha Zabel
Amber R. Comer
spellingShingle Niki Munk
Abby Church
Donya Nemati
Samantha Zabel
Amber R. Comer
Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies
ATOM scale
CAM
CIM
Gender bias
Massage therapy
Professional touch
author_facet Niki Munk
Abby Church
Donya Nemati
Samantha Zabel
Amber R. Comer
author_sort Niki Munk
title Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
title_short Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
title_full Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
title_fullStr Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
title_full_unstemmed Massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one U.S. university
title_sort massage perceptions and attitudes of undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students: a cross-sectional survey in one u.s. university
publisher BMC
series BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies
issn 2662-7671
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Attitudes and beliefs about massage therapy have been explored among health professionals and health profession students, but not for undergraduate preprofessional health sciences students. Methods This cross-sectional survey sought to determine pre-professional health students’ attitudes and perceptions toward massage therapy and determine the extent demographic variables such as age, gender, race, along with lifetime massage experience are associated with neutral/negative perceptions. Results N = 129 undergraduate students completed the Attitudes Toward Massage scale and 7 supplemental items pertaining to sexuality and therapist gender preference along with questions regarding lifetime massage utilization. Prevalence of massage therapy utilization was 35.6% (lifetime) and 18.6% (last 12-months). Overall, positive attitudes towards massage therapy was observed with participants reporting massage experience expressing more positive massage attitudes (lifetime; p = 0.0081, the past 12 months; p = 0.0311). Participants with no massage experience were more likely to report neutral/negative attitudes toward massage (p = 0.04). Men were more likely to prefer their massage therapist to be of the opposite sex (38.9%) compared to women (2.1%) (p = < 0.0001). Men were less confident than women in their concern of becoming sexually aroused during massage (p = 0.0001) and in the belief that massage is sexually arousing (p = 0.048). Both genders expressed comfort with female and/or male massage therapists, but if given a choice, both prefer a female massage therapist. Conclusions Undergraduate pre-professional health sciences students have generally positive attitudes towards massage therapy however more research is needed regarding implicit gender bias and/or preferences. This work should inform future research designs examining the impact of attitudes and beliefs on patient referrals to massage therapy.
topic ATOM scale
CAM
CIM
Gender bias
Massage therapy
Professional touch
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-020-03002-6
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