Partners in
Health. Partners in Healing.
Raleigh:
919.510.6655 Cary at Keisler Drive: 919.854.95
Hands
On Health history and vision
In November 2003,
Tammy Campbell, Laura
Landsiedel, and Elizabeth
Laurino,
launched Hands On Health
massage therapy and wellness
as a group practice.
Formerly, Tammy Cole
practiced in Cary as Healthy
Touch Therapy, Laura
Landsiedel's DBA was Hands
On Health in Raleigh and
Elizabeth Laurino's was Apex
Treatment Center. Because
their individual vision and
passion so equally mirrors
each other's, these three
women feel that they are
able to accomplish much more
for their client's
well-being as well as for
their professional community
as a collaborative group
practice.
As
'Hands On Health' we:
Maintain an
environment
where
excellent,
friendly,
and
consistent
services
happen;
seek,
welcome, and
act upon
constructive
input from
employees
and clients;
offer an
accessible
management
policy and
open
therapist-management
communication.
Support an
active
learning
environment:
Hands On
Health
requires its
therapists
to
participate
in its
in-house
medical
massage
training
program,
Integrative
Neuromuscular
Myofascial
Technique,
I-NMT;
provide
direct
access to
advanced
education;
encourage
collaboration
between
seasoned
practitioners
and novices;
encourage
shadowing
and tandem
treatments;
include a
learning
component in
each monthly
staff
meeting.
Practice a
cohesive
teamwork
model; our
clients can
depend on
receiving
the highest
quality
massage
therapy
possible
regardless
of the
practitioner
that they
choose to
visit at a
particular
time or day;
when acting
as a
substitute
for another
therapist,
our
therapists
develop a
talent for
balancing
the ability
to mirror
each other's
skills while
allowing for
appropriate
introductions
to their own
unique
talents; our
therapists
share
treatment
notes,
techniques,
and all have
access to
treatment
outcomes.
Nurture a
healthy
environment
for our
therapists
and their
clients; we
aim to
balance
therapist
health and
environment
needs with
our client's
needs; while
our
therapists
can depend
on steady
and
consistent
work
schedules,
pay, and
reward-for-effort
career
advancement,
our clients
can depend
on a well
trained
collaborative
staff to
meet their
own
treatment
and busy
scheduling
needs.
Offer
clients a
choice:
clients have
the right of
refusal;
they can
choose to
fit into
their
primary
therapist's
posted
schedule or
ask for a
substitute
therapist if
another's
schedule
better meets
his or her
needs;
clients can
view all our
therapist's
schedules
and
qualifications
on the
website; we
assure our
clients that
it is OK to
ask all our
staff their
opinion of
another
therapist's
skills.
Expect and
model
excellence
and
professionalism
within the
business
community-at-large;
actively
participate
as leaders
who
represent
women in
business;
raise and
model
expectations
and
standards
for massage
therapists
as wellness
practitioners
and as
professionals;
collaborate
with
complementary
healing
professions.
Contribute
to the
nurturing
and
financial
needs of the
community-at-large
Community
donations:
Since
January
2004, Hands
On Health
has donated
auction
sessions and
financial
contributions
valued
at over
$24,000.
Maintain an
engaged
owner
management
model;
expect that
only massage
therapists
will own any
future Hands
On Health
massage
therapy and
wellness
practices.
Act to
prevent
therapist
burnout:
breaks
between
sessions and
shorter day
treatment
schedules;
monitor
customer
volume;
support a
therapist's
physical
health;
provide a
stable
business
environment
such that
therapists
can focus
more on
quality
treatments
and less on
mundane
business
activities.
Seek
passionate
career
minded
therapists:
monitor new
therapists
for their
ability to
maintain
standards
and share
talents with
an
enthusiastic
staff and,
if
necessary,
remove
therapists
from the
staff who we
find do not
fit well
into our
practitioner
model.
Provide an
environment
where
adjunctive
careers can
evolve for
our
employees
such as
teaching;
management;
IT,
networking,
marketing,
future
owner/manager
opportunities;
offer career
development
opportunities.
Historically,
massage
therapy
lacked
career
advancement
infrastructure
and
therefore,
the average
career life
was very
low, ranging
from 5-10
years. As a
result,
there is a
sparse
number of
advanced
leaders that
are also
highly
skilled
massage
therapists.
Hands On
Health aims
to make a
difference
in the
career lives
of massage
therapists
and, no less
significantly,
the future
of the
profession
as a whole.