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Incorporation of massage into psychotherapy: An integrative and conjoint approach
  
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Author NameAffiliationE-mail
Paul Posadzki Department of Complementary Medicine, Peninsula Medical School, Universities of Exeter &
Plymouth, 25 Victoria Park Road, Exeter, EX2 4NT, UK 
Paul.Posadzki@pcmd.ac.uk 
Sheetal Parekh-Bhurke School of Allied Health Professions, University of East Anglia, NR4 7TJ, Norwich, UK  
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Abstract:
      This article presents the potential integration of psychotherapy and massage when considering the essence of their beneficial effects. The essence of this model of practice is multifaceted, combining principles from anatomy, physiology and neuroscience with psychotherapy to benefit patient care. It has been advocated that possessing multidisciplinary knowledge from these areas of science enhances psychotherapists’ holistic care of their depressive patients. A narrative review of the literatures and a qualitative, conceptual synthesis has been performed to create a new theoretical-pragmatic construct. This article introduces the concept of massage practice as a part of psychotherapy practice and presents the potential integration of psychotherapeutic knowledge with clinical decision-making and the management of depressive symptoms. The authors emphasize the usefulness of multi- and interdisciplinary knowledge in the psychotherapeutic process and explain how this knowledge might be extrapolated and incorporated into theoretical and practical settings to benefit depressive patients. The justification for this concept is also presented. The principles set out in this article may be a useful source of information for psychotherapists concerned about their patients’ holistic well-being in addition to the psychopathology for which they have sought treatment. Researchers and psychotherapists can obtain valuable and additional knowledge through cross-fertilization of ideas across the arguments presented here.
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