A. To obtain a massage therapy license, an
applicant must submit to the Board the applicant's official and certified
transcript(s) from the applicant's massage therapy school. Official transcripts
must be submitted to the Board directly from the approved massage therapy
school. If a transcript is submitted directly from other than an approved
massage therapy school for an applicant who does not qualify under the
reciprocity provisions of Rule
4.5, then the applicant's massage
therapy school must be accredited and must meet the educational and curriculum
requirements of Section
73-67-35,
as revised. For a massage therapy school that has ceased operation, the
transcript must be provided by a third party that is acceptable to the Board,
such as the custodian of the school's records, or that state's massage
regulatory body, or the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage
and Bodywork, or the Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards.
B. The transcript must verify that the
applicant has completed a board-approved training program of not less than five
hundred (500) hours of massage therapy instruction, and at least fifty (50)
hours of student clinic, with a minimum grade requirement of "C" or better in
every course of instruction, in the following subjects:
1. Two hundred (200) hours in massage theory
and practicum, which must include a minimum of the following classroom hours in
the specified subject areas:
a. Ten (10) hours
in legalities including Mississippi massage law and ethics. Students must be
furnished complete copies of the most current MS Law 73-67-1 et seq., and the
Rules and Regulations for this class;
b. Twenty (20) hours in history, benefits,
indications and contraindications;
c. One hundred (100) hours in massage
demonstration and supervised practice, which must include, but is not limited
to, client evaluation, stroking, kneading, stretching, friction, percussion,
vibration, range of motion, hand held tools and devices designated as t-bars or
knobbies, and draping and turning; and
d. The remaining seventy (70) hours may
expand on any or all of the previous three (3) subject areas including electric
hand held massagers, and/or be related to practical massage.
2. Two hundred (200) hours in
science of the human body and must include a minimum of the following classroom
hours in the specified subject areas:
a.
Twenty (20) hours in anatomy, including all body systems;
b. Twenty (20) hours in physiology, including
all body systems;
c. Twenty (20)
hours in myology/kinesiology;
d.
Twenty (20) hours in neurology;
e.
Twenty (20) hours in pathology, including medical terminology; and
f The remaining one hundred (100) hours may
expand on any or all of the previous six (6) subject areas and/or be related to
the science of the human body.
3. Two hundred (200) hours in allied
modalities and must include, but are not limited to, a minimum of the following
classroom hours in the specified subject areas:
a. Seven (7) hours in Eastern, European and
Western theory/methods;
b. Eight
(8) hours in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and first aid;
c. Ten (10) hours in charting and
documentation;
d. Twenty-five (25)
hours in hydrotherapy and infrared heat;
e. Twenty (20) hours in referral methods
within the health care system; and
f The remaining one hundred eighty (80) hours
may expand on any or all of the previous five (5) subject areas, including The
Americans with Disabilities Act, and/or be devoted to any approach to massage
therapy and wellness, such as trigger points, management, communication,
safety, oriental or Eastern massage techniques and specialized
populations.
4. One
hundred (100) hours in supervised student clinic and must include at least
fifty (50) practical hands-on one-hour massage therapy sessions. Each session
is to be documented on a student clinic log, signed and dated by both the
instructor and the student. Supporting session documents shall include;
a. A client intake form with the client's
name and address, as well as reasons for the session, medical history and
possible indications and contraindications, and a medical release, signed and
dated by the client, instructor and the student therapist;
b. Session notes documented in SOAP format,
signed and dated by the instructor and the student therapist,
c. An evaluation of the session by the
client, including the client's name, the date of the session, and the
signatures and date of the client, instructor and the student therapist.
All session documents shall be kept on file at the school for
a minimum period of two (2) years. Each completed session shall constitute two
(2) hours of student clinic, to include the one hour of actual session and one
hour of class time for instruction and evaluation of the session. All 100 hours
shall be acquired in the school student clinic. All hands-on sessions must be
supervised by an instructor, board licensed in the area being supervised. While
students are prevented from accepting any form of compensation for these
sessions, and a notice to this effect shall be clearly posted in the clinic
reception area, the school may maintain a tip jar for those clients desiring to
tip. Any such proceeds shall be used for the benefit of the class as a whole or
may be donated to a charitable organization.