little.miss.shopaholic
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I’d like to report on what I recently found out about laws regarding massage draping in Virginia.
For many years, I went to a massage therapist in Nevada. When I became a regular client, she advised me that massages were best given with the client undraped and offered to discontinue draping if that was my preference. I considered her a medical professional, so I followed her suggestion; experience proved her correct. Let me stress that the massages were always exactly like professional, ethical medical procedures in a doctor’s office or hospital where the patient is nude—there was absolutely nothing sexual or arousing about them.
I recently moved to Chesterfield County, Virginia, and began seeing another excellent massage practitioner. Other therapists had told her that Chesterfield county requires massage clients to be draped but she does not know exactly what the laws and regulations governing draping are. I discovered that the Chesterfield county code does not cover activities of massage therapists (nor does Virginia’s criminal code). The county defers to state laws and regulations, which are administered by the state nursing board. The board’s publication, “Regulations Governing the Certification of Massage Therapists,” does not cover draping directly, but does say that massage practitioners may be disciplined for “Failing to practice in a manner consistent with the code of ethics of the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork.”
NCBTMB’s code of ethics has only this one reference to draping: “Provide draping and treatment in a way that ensures the safety, comfort and privacy of the client.” Note that this does not forbid a massage therapist from giving an undraped massage if the client feels this is consistent with her/his safety, comfort and privacy (and as long as there is no sexual activity). I contacted a spokesperson for the state nursing board who confirmed that Virginia follows the NCBTMB policy. I also contacted a spokesperson for Chesterfield county who confirmed that no county ordinance forbids undraped massage.
So non-sexual massage without draping is actually legal in Chesterfield county and wherever Virginia’s state law is not superseded by local law. I’ll bet this is the case in many other states that have adopted NCBTMB’s code of ethics.
This leads to the question of whether therapists should offer, or accept requests for, undraped massage. I explore this issue in “Draped vs. Undraped Massages,” section on Business/Practice Ethics, Conduct Issues & Questionable Dilemmas, also posted today.
For many years, I went to a massage therapist in Nevada. When I became a regular client, she advised me that massages were best given with the client undraped and offered to discontinue draping if that was my preference. I considered her a medical professional, so I followed her suggestion; experience proved her correct. Let me stress that the massages were always exactly like professional, ethical medical procedures in a doctor’s office or hospital where the patient is nude—there was absolutely nothing sexual or arousing about them.
I recently moved to Chesterfield County, Virginia, and began seeing another excellent massage practitioner. Other therapists had told her that Chesterfield county requires massage clients to be draped but she does not know exactly what the laws and regulations governing draping are. I discovered that the Chesterfield county code does not cover activities of massage therapists (nor does Virginia’s criminal code). The county defers to state laws and regulations, which are administered by the state nursing board. The board’s publication, “Regulations Governing the Certification of Massage Therapists,” does not cover draping directly, but does say that massage practitioners may be disciplined for “Failing to practice in a manner consistent with the code of ethics of the National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork.”
NCBTMB’s code of ethics has only this one reference to draping: “Provide draping and treatment in a way that ensures the safety, comfort and privacy of the client.” Note that this does not forbid a massage therapist from giving an undraped massage if the client feels this is consistent with her/his safety, comfort and privacy (and as long as there is no sexual activity). I contacted a spokesperson for the state nursing board who confirmed that Virginia follows the NCBTMB policy. I also contacted a spokesperson for Chesterfield county who confirmed that no county ordinance forbids undraped massage.
So non-sexual massage without draping is actually legal in Chesterfield county and wherever Virginia’s state law is not superseded by local law. I’ll bet this is the case in many other states that have adopted NCBTMB’s code of ethics.
This leads to the question of whether therapists should offer, or accept requests for, undraped massage. I explore this issue in “Draped vs. Undraped Massages,” section on Business/Practice Ethics, Conduct Issues & Questionable Dilemmas, also posted today.