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Research: Massage Therapy Benefits
Aggressive Adolescents
Aggressive adolescents who received massage therapy had
lower anxiety, reported feeling less hostile, and were perceived by their
parents as less aggressive, according to a recent study.
"Aggressive Adolescents Benefit From Massage Therapy" was
conducted by Miguel Diego, Tiffany Field, PhD, Maria Hernandez-Reif, PhD,
Jon Shaw, Eugenio Rothe, Daniel Castellanos and Linda Mesner.
Seventeen adolescents, ages 9 to 14, were recruited from a
child and adolescent psychiatry outpatient clinic for the study. Aggression type
(affective aggressive, predatory aggressive or mixed) was determined using the
10-item Aggression Questionnaire. Affective aggression is reactive, and is
characterized by high levels of arousal and poor behavior control. Predatory
aggression is goal-oriented, and is characterized by low arousal and planned
behavior.
Subjects were stratified by age and aggression type and
randomly assigned to either a massage-therapy group or a progressive
muscle-relaxation group.
Participants in the massage-therapy group received two
20-minute chair massages per week for five weeks. The massage therapist,
different each session, gave a standard massage with the adolescent fully
clothed.
Participants in the relaxation-therapy group were
instructed to tense and relax each of the major muscle groups in the back, arms,
face and neck during 20-minute sessions that occurred twice a week for five
weeks.
Assessments were made using the Overt Aggression Scale,
completed by the parents to evaluate overall aggressive behavior; the Child
Behavior Checklist, completed by the parents to measure behaviors associated
with aggression and hostility; the hostility portion of the SCL-90R, a
questionnaire completed by the subjects to assess distress experienced in the
past week; and the State Anxiety Inventory for Children, designed to measure
levels of anxiety.
Only the massage-therapy group showed a significant
decrease in aggression on the Overt Aggression Scale, as well as a significant
decrease in aggression scores on the Child Behavior Checklist. Again, it was the
massage-therapy group alone that showed a significant decrease in hostility on
the SCL-90R and a significant decrease in anxiety on the State Anxiety Inventory
for Children.
"Anxiety has been associated with aggressive behavior and
may influence the expression and modulation of aggressive behavior through its
effects on social interactions," state the study's authors. "Participants
receiving massage therapy reported feeling significantly less anxious after a
20-minute session on both the first and last days of treatment, but participants
receiving progressive muscle relaxation did not."
The authors recommend a larger study to explore the effects
of massage on the specific types of aggression.
—Source: Touch Research Institute. Authors: Miguel Diego,
Tiffany Field, PhD, Maria Hernandez-Reif, PhD, Jon Shaw, Eugenio Rothe,
Daniel Castellanos and Linda Mesner. Originally published in ADOLESCENCE,
Vol. 37, No. 147, fall 2002, pp. 598-607.
This article originally appeared in Massage Magazine,
(800) 872-1282; www.massagemag.com.
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