Incorporating manual therapy

Incorporating manual therapy

Incorporating manual therapy into current interventions: Tips from peers.

In the eleven years that the Foundations in Manual Therapy: Voice and Swallowing Disorders course has been taught, one of the more frequent questions facing new learners is a deeper understanding of how manual therapy (and shared decision-making) is to be incorporated into the treatment routines of SLPs and other professions. Due to these questions, a new video series has been started. I’ve polled clinicians of all types, including SLPs in a range of work settings, on how they’ve incor[prated the work into their daily routines. While all will be presented from a basic framework of questions, I do hope that the range of responses allows you to see how this work can fit in with and enhance your current strategies.


Walt Fritz
Author: Walt Fritz

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A sample chapter from Manual therapy in voice and swallowing: A person-centered approach

A sample chapter from “Manual therapy in voice and swallowing: A person-centered approach

Writing Manual therapy in voice and swallowing: A person-centered approach has marked a high point in my career. It resulted from decades of experience in the manual therapy tenches, including some difficult life lessons. Documenting many of the underlying problems with typical manual therapy narratives, ones that often go unchallenged, it builds from a wider range of explanatory narratives to craft an approach that depends more on the individual patient’s life experiences rather than the clinician’s often biased views. In reality, it is a blend of the two, but an approach that attempts to never let one stomp on the other. The book is both theoretical and practical, hopefully meeting the needs of many audiences. 

Details on purchasing the book may be found at this page of the website. The book chapter, Building a model, may be accessed here.

Walt Fritz
Author: Walt Fritz

Podcasts and Articles

Podcasts and Articles

Walt Fritz, PT’s Podcasts, Videos, and Articles

Over the past few years, I’ve been fortunate enough to participate in a number of podcasts and interviews that are available for listening. They range from voice/swallowing-specific to more general interviews that speak to various aspects of the manual therapy work that I teach. Strongly represented are principles of the patient-centered model, shared decision-making, and a blended multifactorial-explained model, all moving forward from older tissue-specific models of manual therapy. Also included are published articles I’ve written to define this work better.

Nicole Goldfarb, M.A. CCC, SLP- COM® is a Speech-Language Pathologist, Certified Orofacial Myologist, International speaker, author, Ambassador for the Breathe Institute, Talk Tools educational partner, and has served on the faculty for the Sleep Education Consortium and Airway, Sleep, and Pediatrics Pathway (ASAP) program. She has completed over 50 presentations nationally and internationally on OMT as it relates to sleep-disordered breathing in both children and adults. Nicole is the owner of San Diego Center For Speech Therapy & Myofunctional Therapy. She currently serves as a mentor and consultant to patients, professionals, and colleagues nationally and internationally in the field of OMT. For more on Nicole, visit her practice: www.sandiegocenterforspeechtherapy.com.


Join me as I talk with Kari Ragan and a NATS Chat: Discovering Your Voice: Stretching Tips to Expand Your Range (and Mind).


Rob Klienberg, PT, invited me to an interview for his website, Rock the Recovery. Our talk centered around my history at a physical therapist and my creation of the Foundations in Manual Therapy: Voice and Swallowing Disorders seminar. You can read the interview here

 

I’ve been a long-time admirer of The Thinking Practitioner podcast and the work of Whitney Lowe and Til Lucau. Til asked me to talk about dealing with chronic cough with a real patient, such as massage and manual therapy educator Ruth Warner. You can watch the podcast here on YouTube.

I was honored to be asked by Judy Rodman, a renowned performer and vocal coach, to talk about my work on her podcast, All Things Vocal.

https://youtu.be/jJubFqFQod8
  • Eric Purves, RMT, asked me to appear on his podcast, “Purves Versus”, where we discussed the importance of finding an acceptable balance in our understanding, our communication and how we teach continuing education. Our treatment interventions aren’t always just about one tissue or a special technique; they are more complex than that, and the outcomes people experience are more strongly related to the strength of the therapeutic relationship. You can listen to our talk at this link.

  • Brett Kane had me as a guest on his 21st Century Vitalism podcast. Our conversation included:

SHOW TOPICS
Following Evidence-Based Practice
The Power of Placebo and Nocebo
How the Therapeutic Relationship Creates Change
Shared Decision-Making in a Therapeutic Setting
Is Pain Neurological or Structural?
Touch and Emotions
Why Being an ‘Expert’ Might Not Be Ideal
The Benefits of Not Knowing in a Therapeutic Setting

https://youtu.be/h3ioYDFSQ1Y
  • Discussing Person-Centered Model Approaches of Manual Therapy for SLPs. I had the pleasure to again be interviewed by Wilson Nice, SLP, on her Nice Speech Lady podcast on shared decision-making and how it applies to the SLP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbUwYszMAd4
https://youtu.be/4HBV8B2B_vQ
  • I teach my manual therapy for voice and swallowing disorders seminars in person and online. This includes a hybrid one-on-one version of the Introductory and Advanced classes taught in my Upstate New York office. Thanapat Yartcharoen (Film) is a vocal coach from Thailand who had taken my Introductory Foundations in Manual Therapy: Voice and Swallowing Disorders and Balancing the Body classes on previous visits to the United States. On this visit, he spent two days in my clinic, where we worked through the extensive content of the Advanced class in a one-on-one setting. Film asked to film a post-class interview for his Thai vocal performing clientele and was kind enough to share the video with me.

  • Takeaways from manual therapy: At the recent class in Eugene, Oregon, I sat down with Melody Sheldon, ClinScD., CCC-SLP, to talk about the class for her podcast, Speech Plus so much more. You can listen below. 

Join me as I speak to the hosts of The Agent Voice, for a talk on power imbalances in the therapeutic setting.

https://youtu.be/NesBSq3f0G8
  • In a repeating theme of mutual respect, Stephen King and I got together once again to talk about what it means to be an evidence based, shared decision maker in manual therapy. You can watch the talk here on YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rbFTnh87JxA&t=159s
  • Based on overlapping concepts and ideas, the orofacial myology and myofunctional community have been regular attendees at my live workshops. I was honored to be interviewed by Brittny Sciarra, RDH, on her Eye Spy With My Myo Eye podcast. You can watch the entire interview here.
https://youtu.be/UnfH9kT0sAc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IfbgPNUpoJQ
  • Crossing the Chasm, when it comes to transitioning to a new system of beliefs, seems a rite of passage for many in the therapeutic communities. The Chasm, in this case, refers to the well of uncertainty regarding how we explain our various work. In manual therapy, the Crossing often refers to moving from older, historical views of tissue-based or pathology-based explanations into updated and multifactorial explanations. My leap was gradual, and I explain how the process went in this interview. Though presented from a physical therapist’s perspective, the evolutionary process is faced by many, be they massage therapists, physical therapists, speech-language pathologists, and more. Jamie Johnston, RMT interviewed me for his MTDC Community. Give it a watch here.
https://youtu.be/tneHJZE8wrQ
https://youtu.be/LpZrvzTi2UI
  • I was there for Episode #22 of Theresa Richard’s Swallow Your Pride podcast, where I dive into dysphagia, from a manual therapy perspective, and I’m back in Episode 215, Mastering Manual Therapy. You can listen here.
https://youtu.be/Jkd8Y5mSdGE
  • Interview with Rachel Lynes, from UK-based The Sing Space, where we talk of manual therapy’s usefulness with the singer and include a bit of self-treatment. Link
  • Juliette Caton, from the UK Podcast Vocal Scope, and I spent some time speaking to the role of manual therapy and the performing voice. Link
  • On the UK-based Naked Vocalist podcast, hosted by Steve Giles and Chris Johnson, I spent some time talking about manual therapy’s purpose in voice and performance, as well as moving through some self-care routines. Link
  • I joined Rani Lill Ajum, P.hD. in philosophy at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences and Stephen King, UK-based vocal coach and vocal massage therapist, for an hour-long talk about complexity and causation in the manual therapy patient. Complexity; simplified.
  • Stephen King and I sat down to talk about skepticism, tongues, and omohyoids. Link
  • I was asked by the National Spasmodic Dysphonia (SD) Association to write an article on manual therapy’s potential use with SD. Link
  • After attending one of my Voice and Swallowing Disorders in New York City, massage therapist/educator Beret Kirkeby wrote a review of her experience. Link
  • At the request of the Association of Massage Therapists (Australia), I wrote an article on The Vocal Athlete (nods to Marci Daniels Rosenberg and Wendy Leborgne!) Link Similarly, I wrote a similar article for the Massage New Zealand Magazine titled, Myofascial Release/Massage with the Vocal Athlete. Link
  • Watch a few videos of laryngeal manual therapy being expelled externally, with FEES views internally here, here, and here.
  • Join me on the Healing Ground Podcast with Dr. Carly for our talk on Voice and Swallowing Disorders and integrating a patient-centered model into manual therapy interventions. You can catch the podcast at this link.
  • Robert Gardner II, LMT and online educator, sat down for another one of our talks. This time about the common denominators in Manual Therapies and Massage. You can catch the whole interview here.
  • Daniel Pablo Albillo, from the Australian-based Knowledge Exchange, and I talk about the biopsychosocial aspects of manual therapy. Link
https://youtu.be/423n3MK8Nx8
  • A video podcast with Matt Phillips of the UK-based Sports Therapy Association. Link
  • On their podcast Pain Reframed, Liz Peppin and Jeff Moore take me down the rabbit hole of manual therapy’s tawdry image regarding its place next to exercise in the physical therapy profession and how it has a place in today’s market. Link
  • Scott Dartnall and I sat down for a longer talk on the concept of Mastery and some of the problems with that term and concept as they apply to those using manual therapy as an intervention. Link
  • Mark, from 2 Massage Therapists and a Microphone, and I discussed all things MFR, unpacking much of the BS from the tissue-based beliefs of the MFR (and other) communities. Link
  • Haley Winter allowed me a number of podcasts on his How’s the Pressure podcast, with a longer format interview on what was, at that time, my version of MFR. You will also find my input on a variety of topics relevant to the massage and physical therapist scattered throughout a number of other interviews on his website.
  • Nick Ng, from Massage & Fitness Magazine, and I sat down after a teaching trip to Hong Kong to discuss my approach to manual therapy. Link
  • Robert Libbey, RMT, and I sat down for a talk that began with my hand (surgery) and drifted into some mutually agreeable topics on narratives and education in manual therapy. Link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUyNUPhqZ0o
  • Dr. Joe Muscolino interviewed me for his website, Learn Muscles, on being an educator. Link
  • For the Massage New Zealand Magazine, I wrote a referenced article on Shared Decision-Making in the Manual Therapies. Link
  • Seeing one’s work reach those in need is rewarding. After reaching a seminar in Kansas, one of the speech-language pathologists continued working with a patient who came in to act as one of my models in the seminar. You can watch his story here.
  • While still referring to the work that I teach as MFR, I was asked to write an article for Massage Magazine on treatment to the region of the diaphragm. Link
  • As a contributor to Massage & Fitness Magazine, I wrote and article titled Finding My Voice: A Patient-Centered Perspective, Link, Say Nothing, Link, and Let Your Stories Mature and Grow, Link.
  • In an issue dedicated to research, I wrote A Deconstruction of Beliefs: A First-Person Account for the Massage New Zealand Magazine. Link

Please check back as this list grows.

There is a deep list of videos that provide the curious leaner much information on the approach used in this work. The Manual Therapy: Voice and Swallowing Disorders YouTube page is a place to start. For more general manual therapy videos, check out this page. For self-help videos suitable for sharing, click here to be taken to that YouTube page.

A podcast that I respect and recommend is Dr. Oliver Thomson’s Words Matter podcast. Covering a wide range of topics, with relevance to the PT, MT, and SLP, Dr. Thomson unpacks the factors at-play in the therapeutic relationship. He is also working his way through the CauseHealth (see below) book with the authors, with each chapter covered in separate podcasts. You can listen to Dr. Thomson’s podcast at this link.

CauseHealth is a project to address complexity in causation regarding therapeutic interactions. They’ve made their latest book, Rethinking Causality, Complexity, and Evidence for the Unique Patient available at no charge , and can be downloaded here. No matter your profession I cannot recommend a source more highly.

Cheers,

Walt Fritz, PT

Foundations in Manual Therapy Seminars and The Pain Relief Center

www.waltfritz.com

Please consider checking out my online course offerings, , including a full hands-on online course. You can find the information here. Also, read up on my in-person seminars at the links in the menu on this page.

Walt Fritz
Author: Walt Fritz

Getting to yes. Using negotiation in the therapeutic process

Getting to yes. Using negotiation in the therapeutic process

Getting to yes: Using negotiation in the therapeutic process.

Walt Fritz, PT
(Updated January 2024)

In this article, I want to dive deeply into the options available to the therapist, explicitly using a patient-centered, negotiation-driven model of care. A model like this becomes a therapeutic partnership, an alliance for a common goal. Contrast this model with the more common therapist-centered model, where the clinician is seen as the expert, capable of independently making decisions about diagnosis and treatment. While therapists immersed in their expertise may take umbrage to my characterizations, I ask for patience to allow this explanation to play out.

Though I was trained in the clinician-as-expert model of manual care, over the past two decades, I’ve transitioned my physical therapy practice and continuing education classes into one featuring shared decision-making (SDM), allowing negotiation throughout the treatment process. With negotiation, the application of intervention becomes balanced. Without negotiation, intervention is driven solely by the therapist’s beliefs and experience (ego), possibly missing out on an outcome that has better meaning to the patient.

“Getting to Yes,” by Roger Fisher, was a best-selling business book published in 1991. The Amazon.com summary states, “It is based on the work of the Harvard Negotiation Project, a group that deals with all levels of negotiation and conflict resolution. Getting to Yes offers a proven, step-by-step strategy for reaching mutually acceptable agreements in every sort of conflict.” I remember hearing of it earlier in my career, and the memory surfaced recently as a potential frame of reference regarding the manual therapy I currently use and teach. While the phrase, getting to yes, might be somewhat narrowly focused regarding the outcome of manual therapy, I see it as a productive and necessary step to fulfill before determining treatment. The concepts presented in “Getting to Yes” have meaning today.

Like most other intervention methods, manual therapy (MT) training has a predictable pattern, many of which I’ve witnessed since beginning my formalized MT training in 1992. Whether it be the commonly seen problems of pain or movement disorders faced by physical therapists and massage therapists or the need to reduce the severity of the impact of dysphagia, dysphonia, trismus, and the full range of other diagnoses facing the speech-language pathologist, orofacial clinicians, and others, the application, brand, or style appears to matter little. The timeline often proceeds as follows: when first exposed to a new type of intervention strategy, typically through continuing education, the clinician conservatively doses the therapy, not quite sure of its value or their level of skill. With experience, the therapist uses the modality with greater comfort. With apparent positive results, additional training will often be pursued or encouraged. An illusion is usually formed, where the clinician believes that as their expertise and knowledge improve, their ability to determine the cause of a problem and the correct technique is also enhanced. With that confidence often comes the belief that they can better determine what is wrong with the patient and know how to remediate the issue. Such confidence allows the clinician to feel prepared to help another person through a process that the person knows little about. However, might acting with such certainty minimize the patient’s perspective, values, and preferences, perspectives that can both help and hinder a process?

No matter our profession, we are seen as experts in our respective fields, well-prepared to understand the deeper issues underlying a disorder and know which intervention to apply to remedy that problem. This reasoning seems standard practice in most healthcare and typically meets with success. However, are there ways to improve outcomes? Are there ways to enhance patient buy-in? Are there ways to better honor the three aspects of the evidence-based practice model (EBP)?

I ask readers to keep in mind the three equal elements of EBP:

  1. The published evidence,
  2. Clinician’s experience applying the evidence, and
  3. Patient perspectives and preferences concerning the evidence and the clinician’s perspectives.

Those three legs are taught in most health-related curriculums and were established to improve the quality of interventions. However, of those three inclusions, I believe that patient perspectives and preferences are given far too little emphasis and respect across the broad spectrum of healthcare. Recent trends in narrative medicine and other more patient-centric approaches are beginning to create change, but manual therapy models seem to have lagged behind others. I propose a method and model that contrasts sharply with traditional MT clinician-as-expert training approaches (where the therapist is seen as capable of making treatment decisions on the patient’s behalf). I propose elevating patient perspectives and preferences to carry equal weight with the evidence and the clinician’s experience applying said evidence. Some call this approach a shared decision-making (SDM) model, a moniker I use throughout my writing and coursework.

I’ve been exposed to many learning models in my years of learning and applying MT. Being encouraged to pursue additional coursework was a given, actively encouraged, and sometimes required. Early on (myofascial release and craniosacral training), working intuitively was highly stressed, though ill-defined. I was invited to develop my intuition to work toward having a deeper understanding of processes that, in essence, allowed me to see inside another person. I was taught to determine what was wrong with my patients through various means by merely looking at them. These skills involved conventional evaluation methods, such as postural assessment and movement observance. I noted postural deviations from an idealized norm and observed movements that deviated from similar idealized perspectives. I was taught how to interpret those findings based on the model being introduced. Postural deviations were seen as problematic due to explanations steeped in physicals and biomechanics: if the machine is not well-aligned, it is bound to fail. We were taught to align the body for optimal performance. These are not uncommon perspectives and continue to be presented in current educational models. But the human body and condition are not machines. It is complex and unique, capable of adapting to stressors and conditions that appear to belie traditional mechanistic models of explanation.

I was also encouraged to “read” the body, seeing patterns, colors, and holding patterns that would lead me to know what treatment needed to be done. Suppose all of this sounds far-fetched; welcome to the world of pseudoscience. To many, these concepts make sense but are often mere logical fallacies. Using the taught approach seemed to result in positive outcomes, and armed with such power, why would I have stopped believing in the basic tenets of that myofascial release approach I had learned?

The clinician determines if their preferred treatment style might be helpful in the typical MT intervention. That exercise alone is biased, especially if, in the eyes of the therapist, manual therapy is one of their go-to tools. I recognize this bias as my own, though I try to see through it. Myofascial release had been my bias, tool, and belief for at least twenty years. People come to me daily in pain or living with dysfunction, and I apply my biases toward their issues. Over the years of using MFR, I saw the trend I sank into, objectifying their condition as a simple set of fascial restrictions set in place from injury, trauma, surgery, or other conditions, conditions that my skillset was especially good at remediating. Every patient became the nail, well-suited for my hammer. My biases were reinforced by success with many of the patients who sought me out. If the theories behind my fascial training were correct, then my interventions should be helpful, which they were. No dilemma existed, even though many outside my MFR tribe saw significant problems with the explanatory narrative utilized in MFR and many other modalities targeting tissues and pathologies.

This dilemma seems nebulous and meaningless to the uninitiated, those new to manual therapy. But the dilemma is real to those who’ve spent time exploring the various modality rabbit holes. How can so many modalities have the answer? Can each tissue/pathology-based manual therapy model truly singularly and selectively access and successfully intervene in that dysfunction? Can there be so many unique tissue-based problems in the body that lie in wait for the therapist specially trained in a model devoted solely to that problem? Is it a “myofascial restriction” that is remediated by an MFR therapist? Is the trigger point therapist remediating that trigger point, or are they applying a work that patients benefit from, no matter the mechanism of action? Is the gentle, affective touch used by the craniosacral therapist really balancing the body’s craniosacral rhythm and movement of spinal fluid, or is their light touch impacting autonomic centers, capable of introducing the same changes the CST clinician believes are due to other pathologies? These questions are often seen as heretical by devotees of tissue and pathology-based manual therapy modality families as they question the fundamental underpinnings taught. Such talk is often squelched. However, these are conversations that need to occur.

Manual therapy is often helpful for many disorders, whether in the niche of voice and swallowing or the larger body of conditions impacting human existence. But does MT work in the manner described by its followers? Diving deeply into the evidence pulls out a relative lack of irrefutable proof of both the tissue-based dysfunctions that are responsible for the disorders we treat and our ability to impact those tissues for intervention selectively. Such omissions are lacking in nearly all the published scientific literature that studies the efficacy of manual therapy, though many readers of the evidence fail to see the problem. In most manual therapy papers, there is a conflation of the mechanism of action and efficacy (or positive outcomes). Proving efficacy is often allowed to be sufficient proof of the stated mechanism of action. The complexity of the human condition is seldom reducible to problems in one tissue or region, be it muscle, fascia, tongue ties, postural deviation, flexibility, or strength, especially when viewed through the lens of biopsychosocial understanding.

Despite enormous progress in scientific understanding of pathologies and models of care, we are still not at a place of complete understanding. Instead of choosing a tissue or pathology-based model of manual therapy, I’ve modified my process to allow the patient to be the focus of care. This shift represents a movement towards patient empowerment rather than my skill and beliefs being the centerpiece. While I fully admit I cannot abandon my knowledge, training, and past experiences (ego/bias) entirely, I attempt to temper such factors by fostering a relationship where my patient plays a more active role in determining treatment. In my classes, I speak to this as a point of distinction between other modalities and perspectives. In many trainings, whether it is a model teaching manual circumlaryngeal treatment (MCT) or more broadly applied myofascial release and manual therapy, the clinician is tasked with locating the problem, often based on palpation. The clinician’s training strongly biases this palpation. While one therapist trained in MCT, for instance, may feel excessive muscle tension, another clinician trained in myofascial release may feel fascial restrictions. It is quite possible that what they think through this palpation is the same “thing.” Such conflicts are seldom spoken of across MT circles, as each prefers to stay within their tribal narratives.

In my view, the historical “clinician-as-expert” model lacks one major component; no matter how much I know how much training I’ve had, I cannot determine what a patient is feeling. I cannot palpate what a patient feels might be helpful or harmful. I cannot palpate or evaluate a patient’s expectations, preferences, and perspectives. Working in a one-way fashion, where the clinician is tasked with determining what is best for another human being, allows only one person’s voice to be heard.

So, how can one overcome these obstacles? How does using a patient-centered model that instills ownership of the patient’s perspective and preferences matter within the uncertainty mentioned above? I believe that it matters because of the uncertainty. We cannot be sure if our tissue-based beliefs are accurate, which is a troubling concept. Sure, many outcome-based studies point to positive outcomes when a model of care is applied. But none of those studies dives deeply into understanding the complete mechanisms of action that touch and MT play. Lacking a comprehensive mechanism of action for the results of our work requires us to exist in an uncertain world. However, there is hope.

Those who inform my views are researchers such as Bialosky (2028), Geri (2020), Kolb (2020), Roy (2019), and Weppler (2010), who, through various perspectives, point to higher levels of influence and control in terms of why changes might be elicited at the periphery. They are not negating the possibility of what we’ve learned about local effect manual therapy models but instead point to other influences and factors that drive change. The tapestry we work with (and from) is a rich one.

I continue to use palpation in my intervention and teach it during each of my seminars. But instead of palpating to locate the cause or actual location of a condition, like most other manual therapy models, I use palpation to begin a communication process with my patient. In older models, palpation leads to the conclusion, “I’ve found your (muscle tension, fascial restriction, trigger point, etc.); let’s see what we can do about this.” Treatment typically follows the findings of palpation. I propose a model that uses that same palpation. However, palpation is used to begin a conversation with my patient. “This area seems tight; does this feel familiar to you?” From this point, SDM starts.

In MFR, my evaluation findings led me to know what needed to be done. I was a fascial expert, a trait few of my patients shared (or even understood). My treatment suggestions may have seemed foreign to most patients, but my reputation and the hope that I would help allowed them to trust me. I cannot discard all my experience, but the more I learn, the more I mistrust my instincts. I’ve learned to trust my patients more and work to temper my beliefs with the knowledge that I do not know what my patients are feeling, what they hope for, and what they might fear unless I ask. I have no way of truly knowing if they will ask me to move into their pain or dysfunctional feelings or lighten up my touch and pressure into a feeling they identify as helpful unless I ask. I have no way of knowing what sort of pressure/pain tolerance they might have unless I ask. I have no way of knowing if the things I’ve located through palpation or other evaluation could be significant, beneficial, or harmful unless I ask. Despite all my training and experience, I can never know the answers to these and countless other questions unless I ask. But most manual therapy training is built on a process that doesn’t ask; the patient’s input is often minimized or at least deferred to the therapist’s clinical expertise. Usually, this all works well in the end, but are there ways to improve this process?

Coupling our expertise and training with the expectations and perspectives of the patient is the crux of my approach. It is what gets us to yes. “Yes, that feels helpful,” or “Yes, I think this might be useful.” Getting to yes brings the therapeutic process into a partnership, an alliance. Of course, we can’t just ask our patients what they think is wrong with them, ask them what we should do, and then do it…or can’t we?

I recently listened to a podcast from a few well-regarding physical therapists who were speaking about shared decision-making and patient-centered care. With a note of sarcasm, when talking about patients not knowing the nitty-gritty of physical therapy, one quipped, “Well, it’s not like we can ask our patients to choose what exercises they wish to do.” This remark provided a laugh to the other expert PT. In their world, expertise drives interventions, despite many studies published over the past ten years showing that the specificity of exercise interventions matters less than once thought. Exercise is helpful, but few physical therapists know why (Powell, 2022). Rather than choosing the correct intervention, some authors have linked the alliance built between patient and provider as one of the more significant influencers of change (Alodaibi 2021). Manual therapy studies have shown similar issues. For instance, the specificity of MT for laryngeal dysfunction was seen to be unnecessary when compared to more global MT treatment Ternström et al. (2000). Manual therapy intervention is complex, so far as mechanisms at play and quickly move into behavioral aspects of the therapeutic relationship, patient expectations and fears, and many more concepts that remain in the shadows. Our educational and continuing education poorly prepared us for these uncertainties.

The way I teach my work is to use palpation as a place to begin a meaningful conversation about what brought them (the patient) into my clinic. As soon as I feel something that, from my past, feels interesting, I see if I am getting my patient’s attention. I immediately try to ascertain if they are feeling something familiar, something they’ve felt before, or associated with the condition or issues that brought them to see me. I put them to work in ways many have never experienced. In essence, I force them to help me help them. I work toward finding a tactile cue that connects with a feeling they’ve felt before, good or bad, and is somehow relevant to them. I do very little selling of an approach or beliefs. If what I’m palpating does not replicate one of these conditions, I move on. If it does connect with their experience, I ask them if the stretch that I am performing feels like it might be helpful. If so, I ask them if they want me to hold the stretch for a while to see if we can change the outcome. If there is anything about my palpation-found stretch that feels like it may not be helpful, I will ask them if it feels like it might be harmful. If so, I immediately stop without any form of coercion. I am attempting to get to yes with them, to find a pressure, stretch, or engagement that they feel will be useful and helpful. I let them decide what constitutes a yes, not me. I allow them to decide what level of pressure or engagement is too much or ineffectual. Many will defer to me; “do what you think is best; I can take it.” With such responses, I will work to allow them to see their place in this therapy. If a more painful treatment I desired, it should come from them and not from me. I let them know that while many believe it must hurt to help, others feel quite differently and that the research doesn’t support that view. But if their lived experience wishes deeper, more painful intervention, I will work with them to meet their needs and desires. If they prefer lighter pressures, I need to assure them they are not sabotaging their process. I require them to participate fully in the therapeutic process and put them in a position of responsibility for helping me help them. Getting to yes, to me, forms a crucial tipping point in the process that moves us from evaluation to treatment.

Have you ever heard of a patient/client leaving a massage session, for instance, saying something like, “That therapist was so good that they were able to find things I didn’t even know that I had!” I have, and I detest, such statements only because the therapist possibly did a somewhat unethical job of selling pathologies to a vulnerable public. Nothing I find is meaningful unless confirmed by my patient. All of this is hard work, though I consider it good work.

Getting to yes. That is my mandate.

Walt Fritz, PT
Foundations in Manual Therapy Seminars
www.WaltFritz.com

Alodaibi, F., Beneciuk, J., Holmes, R., Kareha, S., Hayes, D., & Fritz, J. (2021). The Relationship of the Therapeutic Alliance to Patient Characteristics and Functional Outcome During an Episode of Physical Therapy Care for Patients With Low Back Pain: An Observational Study. Physical therapy, 101(4), pzab026. https://doi.org/10.1093/ptj/pzab026

Bialosky, J. E., Beneciuk, J. M., Bishop, M. D., Coronado, R. A., Penza, C. W., Simon, C. B., & George, S. Z. (2018). Unraveling the Mechanisms of Manual Therapy: Modeling an Approach. The Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy, 48(1), 8–18. https://doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2018.7476

Geri, T., Viceconti, A., Minacci, M., Testa, M., & Rossettini, G. (2019). Manual therapy: Exploiting the role of human touch. Musculoskeletal science & practice, 44, 102044. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msksp.2019.07.008

Kolb, W. H., McDevitt, A. W., Young, J., & Shamus, E. (2020). The evolution of manual therapy education: what are we waiting for?. The Journal of manual & manipulative therapy, 28(1), 1–3. https://doi.org/10.1080/10669817.2020.1703315

Powell, J. K., Schram, B., Lewis, J., & Hing, W. (2023). Physiotherapists nearly always prescribe exercise for rotator cuff-related shoulder pain; but why? A cross-sectional international survey of physiotherapists. Musculoskeletal care, 21(1), 253–263. https://doi.org/10.1002/msc.1699

Roy, N., Dietrich, M., Blomgren, M., Heller, A., Houtz, D. R., & Lee, J. (2019). Exploring the Neural Bases of Primary Muscle Tension Dysphonia: A Case Study Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Journal of voice: official journal of the Voice Foundation, 33(2), 183–194. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvoice.2017.11.009

Ternström, S., Andersson, M., & Bergman, U. (2000). An effect of body massage on voice loudness and phonation frequency in reading. Logopedics, phoniatrics, vocology, 25(4), 146–150. https://doi.org/10.1080/140154300750067520

Weppler, C. H., & Magnusson, S. P. (2010). Increasing muscle extensibility: a matter of increasing length or modifying sensation?. Physical therapy, 90(3), 438–449. https://doi.org/10.2522/ptj.20090012

Walt Fritz
Author: Walt Fritz

2 Responses to Getting to yes. Using negotiation in the therapeutic process

  1. For example I find the palpation that indicates it may be connected to the issue and the client agrees. I ask the client to move. [step forward with one foot] If they ask which one, I say I don’t know. Only their brain knows which movement is the safest. After spending some time evaluating that move and position, whether it is involved in the complaint, makes things better or worse; can we cautiously try the opposite move to see if that leads to more discovery.

    • Hi Hans, I marvel at the way we come up with ways to engage our patients in meaningful action. I am even more appreciative of models that minimize the concept of nocebo introduction (pathologizing), based on the tissue-based narratives most were taught. Bravo for your approach!

21 Questions: Manual Therapy for Voice and Swallowing Disorders – A YouTube Playlist

21 Questions: Manual Therapy for Voice and Swallowing Disorders

July 2023: While this post is dated regarding the title of my work (I evolved away from “Myofascial release/MFR” and into “manual therapy” due to issues of credibility), the content remains quite relevant. The playlist has expanded well beyond the original 21 videos to give the viewer a deeper understanding on the ins and outs of manual care for voice, swallowing, and related disorders. You can view the entire series of videos at this link

I was recently in the UK to take a seminar and stopped by the Vocal Massage practice of Stephen King in Covent Gardens, London for some filming. In advance of this July’s MFR for Neck, Voice, and Swallowing Disorders that I will be presenting in Birmingham, England, and Dundee, Scotland, I was sent a list of questions by one of my UK hosts, SVS Associates, to introduce my work to the UK speech pathologist and voice communities. What unfolded was a rather free-form interview, captured in 21 separate videos, plus one longer format video that shows my style of interview, evaluation, and intervention with a vocal performer. He also allows us to hear him, both pre- and post-treatment.

You can watch the first Question and view the demonstration video below. If you have questions, please post them as comments here on the blog and I will respond. The entire playlist may be accessed via this link: 21 Questions


For now,

Walt Fritz, PT

Foundations in Myofascial Release Seminars

Walt Fritz

Author: Walt Fritz

What I Did On My Summer Vacation

OK, I did a lot more this summer than this, but there is one thing I want to tell you about. Why should you care what I did? Apparently you read my blog because I have something important to say. This one is real important, at least I think so.

Many of you longtime readers know of my dissatisfaction with many existing theories of explanation for myofascial release. If it had stayed grounded in the simple model of 20-30 years ago, a model of ground substance, elastin, and collagen, things probably would not have gotten so contentious. But people just had to take myofascial release and fascia into areas of energy medicine and calling it the most important tissue in the body (paraphrasing inserted, but I think you get my point). This only got folks like Paul Ingraham, a Canadian journalist and former massage therapist, irritated enough to write about it. (See here and here for some pretty brilliant writing) I used to hate Paul’s writing; thought it was just angry fluff from a “non-believer”. The sort of stuff I had to put up with when I was “debating” other non-believers on SomaSimple.com (more on this later). Things have changed for me over the past few years. My allegiances have changed in that I have no longer have allegiances. No, maybe I do, my allegiance is to not continuing to perpetuate non-truths. When one is unaware that what they are saying or practicing is not valid, I call it a non-issue, no foul, even though ignorance is no excuse. But when information comes to the forefront showing what you once believed to be false or simply bad science, continuing along this path is wrong.

My vacation, you may ask, right? Getting there. We are talking about a process here, not an event…

I started on SomaSimple.com around 2005, on a mission to protect my beliefs and my teacher from the non-believers. SomaSimple had/has a lot of them. My plan did not work very well. When confronted with folks who knew a lot more about pain and pain science than myself, I was made into mincemeat. Repeating lines or “science” that I had been fed was quickly seen for what it was, garbage, and I was told so, in not too polite terms. After bobbing and weaving, I succumbed to defeat and sat on the sidelines for quite a while. But, I lurked (that good old-fashioned pastime that the internet allows). During my lurking I read, and BOY is there a lot to read on SomaSimple. (Just post ten times and be a member for a month and you have access to all of it. Tell them I sent you…don’t expect that to be received well. You’ll thicken your skin there, trust me.) None of it would have been interesting to me in the past, because none of it supported what I was doing. But I read and continue to read to this day. During the time I was being spanked on SomaSimple, there was one person who continued to converse with me, offline, with great patience. Diane Jacobs, another Canadian, this time a physiotherapist (what is it about Canadian therapists?) is a proponent of what she terms DermoNeuroModulation, or DNM.

I took a seminar from Diane this past weekend on DNM. It was quite nice to meet her in person, as well as a number of therapists from around the world who I’ve “known” online for a number of years. What I learned was that if one stood back and watched Diane treat as well as watch a typical myofascial release therapist treat, they may not seem too much difference. Sure, we all have subtle or not so subtle differences in the way we treat, but the basics LOOK the same. And, the results may seem quite similar. But, it is what comes between the two that is what is dramatically different. I’m not going to bore you (yet) with the details, because I am still learning and integrating. Suffice it to say that one can explain the changes we achieve from simply looking no deeper than the cutaneous nerves and how we interact with them.

Diane does not present a list of techniques to conform to, but presents a mindset to adapt to. I feel that one of the reasons the fascial community has struggled so long to explain pain from the fascial standpoint, one that is reproducible and testable, one that is supported by accepted science, is that it is so far removed from reality that there isn’t an explanation. There are those who are taught and continue to repeat that proof doesn’t matter, “I am making changes! That’s all that matters!” (sound familiar?) And, what should it matter if you are helping people? It does matter if you know that what you are telling patients is untrue (lying) and if you look deeper into the models of explanation, it WILL lead you to more effective means of treatment.

My profession, physical therapy, has long been moving toward an evidence-based model of practice. Don’t confuse this with a science-based model. Massage is moving in similar directions. Take, for instance, the POEM project (Project for Open Education in Massage), which intends to move massage into a more science-based model. All good stuff. But there are dinosaurs in every profession who are so enthralled by the flash of a modality that they are not able to look at themselves fully (I was a very guilty offender).

So, what I did on my summer vacation was to allow my eyes to be opened. How will that effect my practice and my Foundations in Myofascial Release Seminars? Not sure yet…Already I’ve treated a few folks with results that I had not been able to achieve before this past weekend. I know I do and teach very good work. If nothing else, the model of explanation that I use will change. As for flushing the words “myofascial release” out of my vernacular, I’m not so sure. There is a name recognition value that I find appealing and I don’t know if I wish to discard this. Time will tell. Stick around, this should be an interesting ride!

For now,

Walt Fritz, PT

Walt Fritz

Author: Walt Fritz

31 Responses to What I Did On My Summer Vacation

  1. Walt,
    Very glad to hear of your ongoing journey. I think it’s so easy to say for the frontrunners, such as yourself, to say you are on “top” and be content there. I have so much admiration for you and your continued searching and education and willingness to be open to new ideas. We can all go so much further with that mindset instead of digging our heels into the mud. I believe what I learned from your willingness to share openly about your growth just as important as the modalities themselves. Thank you.

    I b

  2. It takes great courage and commitment to be willing to change. We ask it of our patients, it’s good to be able to apply it ourselves.
    I love learning and this journey through the wonders of modern pain science is pretty damn awesome. Looking forward to seeing where you go with adding the science, keep writing!

  3. I love to hear your enthusiasm coming through! My passion is for Myofascial Release but I too am finding that some other modalities (or principles) can enhance MFR. Keep up the good work – hope to be in one of your seminars again very soon!

  4. Hi Walt,
    Great blogpost. It takes a lot of strength to change the “mesodermal” attitude. The more we have invested time and money wise into that belief, the more difficult it is to change. I know how you feel, I went through a dark time when I was learning that my work wasn’t about muscles or fascia- it took a while to integrate the new information but I am now so happy that I did.

    I think it shows great maturity and courage to be on the path you are on right now and both you and your patients will benefit from it in the long run, if they aren’t already!

    Warmly,
    Rajam

    • The time and money that I spent investing in myofascial release was well spent, as it gave me a start and a great sense of touch. But the “quantum physics” approach to MFR was the wrong direction.

  5. Walt,

    It was great to meet you (at last!) in San Diego. I have admired the way you write and conduct yourself online for years, and it was a genuine pleasure to see you having such a good time at the DNM seminar. My respect for you continues to grow; I admire the courage it takes to write a blog post like this one. I hope that our paths cross again.

    Jason

    • Thanks, Jason. Changes in beliefs are frequently met with resistance and scorn. And that was just in the last four days! Nice meeting you as well.

  6. Walt,

    Wow, man, you are amazing. You grow ever higher in my esteem, not because of being in agreement with my own beliefs but because of the profound courage, integrity, and commitment to learning that you display.

    I first “met” you on some pretty stupid forums at a site I won’t mention here. You stood out from most of the others because you made intelligent comments and were willing to dialogue respectfully, even when we did not agree. I appreciated that.

    When I was going through a transition myself and trying to get clear about some distinctions between DNM and MFR, you directed me to some threads at SomaSimple which you described as “not my finest hour” but you thought they would help me understand. And they did. I was impressed that you exhibited such honesty and that you were willing to sacrifice your ego in order to help educate me.

    When I heard you were taking the DNM seminar, I thought that was fascinating and looked forward to what you had to say about that. I’m not keeping up with FB real well but saw some comments and had to read. I agree wholeheartedly with one of the comments: “A class act.”

    Walt, I cannot tell you how deeply touched I am that you would allow yourself such honest inquiry that could, for a lesser person, feel threatening. And then to be so open about it. It’s awesome and inspiring.

    I know you’ve been teaching a long time and I’ve always sensed a commitment to honesty in your teaching. Even when I’ve disagreed with you, I respected you. My respect has just jumped to a new level.

    I imagine you will continue to teach and that the shift in your understanding will create some changes. However, there is no doubt in my mind that you *will* continue and will have even greater impact.

    I’m sorry that I missed you when you were in St. Louis. Coincidentally, I was in Montreal taking the DNM seminar.

    I’m sure we’ll meet some day and I look forward to it. Until then, I am proud to be your internet friend.

  7. “If nothing else, the model of explanation that I use will change. As for flushing the words “myofascial release” out of my vernacular, I’m not so sure. There is a name recognition value that I find appealing and I don’t know if I wish to discard this. Time will tell. Stick around, this should be an interesting ride!”

    You might want to have some conversation with Todd Hargrove, a Seattle-based Rolfer who has adapted a neuro-based approach. Maybe you could be a mole for the neuro revolution – pretend to teach MFR but teach it from a neuro point of view. Call it NMFR. It’s a thought. 😉

  8. Hi Walt
    interesting to read of your journey, who would have thought being able to take one grindingly painful small step back, to look at ourselves, it enables a gaint leap forward in enlightenment.
    Thankyou for all your blogs and discussions on MBP always interesting as is your research page on your website.

    Stephen Jeffrey

  9. Hi Walt,

    I really appreciate your candor and the honesty of your post. Your thread on Soma was one of the first I read. To watch how you have changed your mind is something to truly admire.

    It is a rare thing indeed to raise your standards to the level of rigor that you have.

    Much respect.

  10. Walt,

    Thanks so much for sharing your experiences with coming to terms with changes in the bodywork world. I have also had to question my prior teachings and try to wrap my mind around the “evidence” or lack thereof for some of the explanations for why bodyworkers do what we do…and many times the evidence falls short. Challenging the status quo of established massage myths and beliefs is not a popular path, but in my view, it is an important one. By sharing your experience, you give courage and inspiration to those of us that would like to divorce massage therapy from New Age practices and would like bodyworkers to be able to explain what we do via science not superstition. I too hope to take some of Diane seminars when time permits so it’s helpful to hear a big MFR guru (yes, I just called you a guru) have such a good experience with DNM. And now I feel a need to venture over to Somasimple and lurk a bit more and learn from you and others.

    Sue Shekut

    • Yes, we will. Historically the MFR community is held together quite tightly, with very little room for differing opinions. In this case, change will come from outside not from inside.

  11. Walt,

    I’ve been watching the recent discussion on migraines on Linkedin, and see what you mean about resistance-seems no one else in that thread is giving ANY thought to the nervous system!

    I’ve been wanting to get to Walt’s course for awhile already, now even more eager after he went to the DNM course!

  12. Growth and change is what it’s all about. There is nothing wrong with the integration of new information as it comes to the fore. I have a science head for a friend who continually challenges me, but until the research is done we are sort of stuck in the experiential reality we know. I’m always searching for knowledge and then share the new information as it comes available to us.
    Well done Walt! Glad the new knowledge has refreshed your enthusiasm further!
    LeeAnne

  13. Just wonderful, Walt. It’s really a treat to hear that someone no longer hates my writing! Any half decent writer can get fans by artfully preaching to a particular interest group; but it’s nearly impossible to win a reader over from the far side of a conceptual chasm unless I’m doing my job really well (and persistently). It’s the best possible feedback I can get.

    Soma Simple was influential for me as well. Diane Jacobs and Jason Silvernail in particular were important professional role models at a time when I was trying to figure out what it meant to be a “science writer.” Watching what they do forced me to set extremely high standards — standards that now define me professionally.

    • Thanks, Paul. I have already learned that quoting you has gotten me some nasty replies. That’s fine with me, for if you are not challenging anyone’s beliefs, you are not challenging anyone to learn more.

      • Yeah, sorry about that! Quoting me is an easy way to get some hate mail. Just imagine how much I get.

        How people conduct themselves when questioned and challenged says a lot about the nature and quality of their beliefs. I’m afraid your shifting allegiances will almost certainly bring out the worst in quite a few of your colleagues … and it’s going to reflect rather poorly on their position. Whenever anyone questions the assumptions of a faith-based group they belong to, they will get flak for it — which paradoxically strengthens one’s resolve to think more freely, and that in turn provokes even more flak. Oh, irony!

  14. Walt, I am looking forward to your Seminar in Englewood, FL next April and hear and see your the changes in your approach to therapy for people with chronic pain. It sounds exciting!
    Regards, David

  15. As I’ve mentioned before, I continue to learn from ALL of my teachers regardless of whether it’s in or out of the classroom. The integration of DNM looks to be absolutely fascinating; I truly believe in combining techniques which it looks like you are in the process of doing, Walt. I love that your mind is open to the shifts. You’re a fantastic instructor.

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