The Thinking Practitioner

166. Does Research Support What We Do? (with Bodhi Haraldsson)


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🎙 Does Massage Research Actually Work? (with Bodhi Haraldsson)

Bodhi Haraldsson is a registered massage therapist, researcher, and self-described “pracademic” who has spent over 25 years bridging the gap between clinical practice and scientific inquiry. He joins Whitney on The Thinking Practitioner to talk about one of the most important — and most misunderstood — questions in our profession: what does the research actually tell us about massage therapy?

Bodhi’s journey into research began at McMaster University — the birthplace of evidence-based practice — where he joined the Cochrane Cervical Overview Group and helped author a landmark systematic review on massage for mechanical neck disorders. That review, first published in 2006 and later in Spine, analyzed thousands of studies down to just 14 qualifying trials — and found that most of the evidence was limited or unclear. Nearly 20 years later, a 2024 update reached essentially the same conclusions.

But this isn’t a discouraging story. It’s a call to understand what research can and can’t tell us — and why that matters for every practitioner. Bodhi and Whitney explore why absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, why no single study can capture the complexity of clinical practice, and how evidence-based practice isn’t about recipes or checklists — it’s about better understanding what we do and why.

✨ Topics discussed include: Whitney and Bodhi walk through the Cochrane review process, the state of massage research, and what individual practitioners can take away from the evidence conversation.

• What a “pracademic” is — and why massage needs more of them

• How the Cochrane Cervical Overview Group conducted its systematic review of massage for neck pain
• Starting with thousands of studies and ending with 14 qualifying trials — and why
• Levels of evidence: from strong to limited to unclear
• Why the 2024 update reached essentially the same conclusions as the 2006 original
• The research gap: why massage lags behind physiotherapy and chiropractic in building a cohesive evidence base
• The “lineage model” of massage education vs. academic training
• Mechanical effects, neurological effects, contextual effects — and why we need all the pieces of the puzzle
• Publication bias: why negative findings rarely get published and how trial registries help
• Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence — what that really means for practice
• How research changed Bodhi’s own clinical work: always asking “how and why?”

✨ Resources:

• Cochrane Review — Massage for Mechanical Neck Disorders (2006): https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD004871/full
• Ezzo, Haraldsson et al. — “Massage for Mechanical Neck Disorders: A Systematic Review,” Spine, 2007: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17268268/
• Cochrane Review update — Massage for Neck Pain (2024): https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38415786/
• Connect with Bodhi Haraldsson on LinkedIn and Facebook

🌱 Sponsor Offers:

• Jane – Practice management for health and wellness practitioners. Try it free for one month with code THINKING1MO at https://a-t.tv/jane
• ABMP – Save $24 on new membership at https://abmp.com/thinking
• Books of Discovery – Save 15% with code thinking at https://booksofdiscovery.com/
• Advanced-Trainings – Try one month free of the A-T Subscription at https://a-t.tv/subscriptions/ with code thinking
• Academy of Clinical Massage – Grab Whitney’s free Assessment Cheat Sheet at https://academyofclinicalmassage.com/cheatsheet

✨ Watch the video / connect with us:

• YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AdvancedTrainings/podcasts
• Til Luchau – https://advanced-trainings.com | https://facebook.com/advancedtrainings | https://instagram.com/til.luchau
• Whitney Lowe – https://academyofclinicalmassage.com | https://facebook.com/WhitneyLowe | https://twitter.com/whitneylowe

đź“§ Email us: [email protected]

The Thinking Practitioner Podcast is intended for professional practitioners of manual and movement therapies — bodywork, massage therapy, structural integration, physical therapy, osteopathy, and similar professions. It is not medical or treatment advice.

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The Thinking PractitionerBy Til Luchau & Whitney Lowe

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