On-Line Reflexology Training & Certification

Reflexology Educators, Mentors and Coaches since 1991

  • Home
  • Course Info
    • Foot Reflexology Certification
    • Continuing Education
  • Reviews
  • FAQ
  • About Us
    • Lauren Slade
    • Jack Marriott

Stroke of Luck

December 10, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

He was a frail elderly gentleman out for a free breakfast of sausage and pancakes at one of the many locations offering this morning treat as a celebration of Edmonton’s Klondike Days festival held annually in July. He was probably quite unaware of the life threatening event that was about to occur.

Also attending that pancake breakfast was me, Lauren Slade, newly arrived from England and eagerly anticipating the great Canadian outdoor experience. The event was being held in a car park on top of a mall in South Edmonton. I joined a long line up to collect my coffee…pancakes and sausages and then tried to find somewhere to sit. It was at this point when I surveyed the car park that I realised I was joining approximately one thousand other diners. Seating was understandably hard to find. I eventually squeezed myself onto a bench at the farthest end of the car park.

I was eating my (by now cold) pancake when I was joined by a frail looking elderly gentleman. He sat down and made light conversation with me. As I was listening, he started slurring his speech, and I at first thought that he had been drinking. Then I realised with a start that only one side of his face was speaking and the other side was collapsing with great speed. It suddenly occurred to me that he was having a stroke right now. I immediately stood up and screamed for someone to get medical help, but with there being so many people around it was nearly impossible to get help as quickly as this gentleman needed it.

Being a Hand and Foot Reflexologist for many years, I instantly grabbed his hand and started working the reflexes for the part of his body that I could see was being effected by the stroke (Trying to get socks and shoes off to work foot reflexes simply was not an option). I worked both hands with the type of pressure that I did not think I had in me. I kept talking to him, telling him that everything would be OK, and that help was on it’s way. It seemed like hours, but it was probably only 3 or 4 minutes before medical aid arrived and he was immediately transported to hospital.

What happened? Well I telephoned the hospital and was told that he was alright, and that he was very lucky to have had only a mild stroke!

So was the reflexology that had been performed on his hands literally only moments after the episode started responsible for saving his life? Or was the stoke mild like the hospital said? I shall never know, but I am sure that it was not coincidence that we were seated together on that cold Saturday morning in July.

Reflexology offered to UK Prisoners to Relieve Stress

December 1, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

Inmates at the new Peterborough prison are to be treated to soothing Reflexology and Indian Head Massages.Bosses at the prison are advertising for two part-time holistic therapists to give prisoners the kind of treatments offered by health and beauty salons in the city.United Kingdom Detention Services (UKDS), which runs the £65 million prison, in Saville Road, Westwood, plans to offer the calming effects of reflexology, aromatherapy and Indian head massage to the 216 men and 95 women who are currently behind bars in the modern jail.Today, however, Peterborough MP Stewart Jackson, said: “It is wrong prisoners are treated in this way. Are they using it as a Butlin’s holiday camp?..”But holistic therapist Brian Fossett, of Garden of Eden Holistic Therapies, Lincoln Road, Peterborough, said: ”Reflexology actually works to balance the body. This can help to reduce anger or emotional problems. An holistic approach to health can help to balance the whole person and those tendencies.”People may be doing time for a crime but it is of no benefit to anyone for these people to be stressed. There is no point in sending people out of prison full of anger and stress, it just increases the chance of re-offending.”

Councillor David Sanders, a member of the Cambridgeshire Police Authority, said: “I question whether or not it is good use of tax payers’ money. If I was a victim of crime I would feel very let down by this.

“There may be a time when a prisoner is in need of a reflexologist, but this seems ridiculous.”

UKDS spokesman Nicholas Hopkins said: “There are some prisoners for whom holistic therapy will be extremely beneficial.”

Prison director Mike Conway said: “The incident of self-harm among female prisoners is very high, and this was part of an initiative to help resolve that problem.”

Dr Julian Whitaker’s Health & Healing Newsletter – Reflexology for Health

October 19, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

In the September 2006 Vol. 16, No. 9 issue of Dr. Julian Whitaker’s Health & Healing newsletter on page 5 he writes:

One of our patients’ favorite therapies here at the clinic is reflexology, which involves placing pressure on specific “reflex” points in the feet, hands, and ears. Studies have proven a wide range of benefits for this therapy including faster wound healing, improved circulation, reductions in sleep and mood problems, and declines in gastrointestinal symptoms, to name just a few.

One small study also revealed that reflexology may be useful for hypertension and high triglycerides. A group of patients received two weekly treatments of professional reflexology for six weeks then self-administered foot reflexology twice a week for another four weeks. At the study”s conclusion, systolic blood pressure and triglyceride levels fell markedly, compared to a control group, and quality of life improved as well.

Although reflexology is not a massage per se, it feels wonderful and has profound healing and relaxing effects. To receive treatment at the Whitaker Wellness Institute, visit whitakerwellness.com or call (800) 488-1500.

Source: Dr. Julian Whitaker’s Health & Healing newsletter September 2006 Vol. 16, No. 9 issue page 5

Reflexology back in vogue

October 14, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

As young Shanghainese discover the health benefits of foot reflexology, this ancient traditional Chinese treatment is coming back into vogue in a big way, writes Xu Wei.

At the spacious room of Shu Ya liang Zi Foot Therapy, a professional healthcare chain, customers enjoy a 90-minute, 88-yuan (US$10.6) service which includes soaking the feet in a special bath steeped with 28 kinds of Chinese herbal medicines and a hand-and-foot massage. It’s a therapy that leaves customers in a state of utter relaxation, both physically and mentally.

“Foot therapy is an ideal treatment, advocated by the World Health Organization,” says Li Xueren, director of the chain. “With people’s rising awareness of the quality of their lives, we have witnessed a considerable increase in our customers, who are eager to gain the health benefits from the bottom of their feet.”

The majority of its 22,000 permanent customers, according to Li, are white-collar workers who are obsessed with the pressure of work and eager to find out an outlet for release. (Shanghai Daily News 5th April 2004)

$3 million Research Grant Awarded for Reflexology

October 6, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

LANSING — A Michigan State University researcher wants to know if a natural healing therapy will help women cope with treatment for late-stage breast cancer.

A $3 million National Institutes of Cancer grant will pay for a five-year study of Michigan breast cancer patients treated with reflexology, a massage-like technique that puts pressure on specific points on the soles of the feet or on the hands. The hope is that it will ease stress, depression, anxiety and side effects of treatment.

Gwen Wyatt, a professor of nursing and the principal investigator for the study, said a pilot five years ago of 100 cancer patients at the Western Michigan Cancer Center in Kalamazoo found that reflexology was the most promising among complementary therapies given in addition to conventional treatments.

The pilot also looked at guided imagery, which uses healing images, and reminiscence therapy, where patients recall times they’ve overcome challenges in their lives.

Wyatt stressed that the therapies aren’t being promoted as alternatives to conventional treatment.

“We’re not curing the cancer,” Wyatt said. “We’re really on the human side of it, trying to help them deal with the emotions and hopefully fewer symptoms or decreased severity of symptoms.”

Wyatt said cancer treatment centers are starting to add amenities, such as massage, to give patients something to look forward to rather than just dreading the next round of chemotherapy.

Gary McMullen, vice president of the American Cancer Society, Great Lakes Division, said his group only recommends medical treatments that are scientifically proven. Reflexology is not proven for medical treatment, he said, adding that more research on its ability to enhance quality of life needs to be conducted. “I think it’s worthwhile that these complementary things be looked at and figured out,” he said.

“…There’s a lot of needs, emotional, spiritual, financial, that are left in the wake of a battle with any serious illness,” he said. “How do we get people back on track?”

The pilot study found that women who received reflexology reported they still had symptoms of anxiety, depression and physical side effects from chemotherapy, but they were lessened, Wyatt said.

The theory behind reflexology is that certain areas of the feet correspond to different areas of the body and by stimulating nerves, symptoms are decreased.

Barbara Brower, an Okemos reflexologist with 25 years’ experience, is helping Wyatt with the research and identifying trained reflexologists.

She said reflexology can reduce stress, improve circulation and release toxins that are built up during chemotherapy. The practice is not regulated in Michigan. It cost $50 to $65 for an hour-long session.

She said her profession, once routinely scoffed at by medical practitioners, has become more mainstream in the last decade. “I have physicians that come to me,” she said.

For the first time this fall, an interdisciplinary class offered by the two MSU medical schools and the nursing school gives an overview of the complementary therapies, Wyatt said.

While insurance doesn’t cover reflexology treatment, pretax dollars can be set aside in medical savings accounts, Wyatt said.  For patients in the study, however, the research grant will pay for four sessions each.

Wyatt is recruiting patients from cancer centers around the state including the West Michigan Cancer Center in Kalamazoo, the Great Lakes Cancer Institute’s clinics at the Bay Regional Medical Center in Bay City and the McLaren Regional Medical Center in Flint, and the Lacks Cancer Center at St. Mary’s in Grand Rapids. Other clinics are in Lansing, Traverse City and Detroit. The first treatments should start in January 2006.

Moon Reflexology

September 1, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

“Riddler’s Moon,” starring Kate Mulgrew (“Star Trek: Voyager”), Corbin Bernsen (“L.A. Law”) made in 1998 features Reflexology. George decides Victoria needs relaxing after all the stresses she has been under and decides the Reflexology is just the answer she has been looking for.

The story line is that widow Victoria Riddler (Kate Mulgrew) and her wheelchair-bound son Elias (Daniel Newman) live a meager existence on an Indiana farm that hasn’t yielded a crop in years. Then one day Elias experiences a strange vision–and before long, the Riddlers’ north land is fertile and bountiful. Astonished by this phenomenon, the locals suspect that Elias has somehow developed diabolical superpowers. Only town drunk George (Corbin Bernsen) knows that the answer lies not in Elias, but in the stars.

« Previous Page
Next Page »
Visit Universal College of Reflexology's profile on Pinterest.

Copyright © 2025 · Beautiful Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

 

Loading Comments...