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			<h2><font class="highlight">Shiatsu Regulation in Europe</font></h2>
			<b>by Tom Litten of the General Shiatsu Council</b>
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				<p>My specific interest in the rules and regulations governing the practice of
				shiatsu in the European Union began in themid-90's, when I was planning to move to
				France and practice Shiatsu.</p>
				<p>I was advised by some masseurs that registration with a
				registered association was necessary for any profession in France, but that such a
				registration gave one certain protection from state interference. They recommended
				registration with a bodywork association AMEN. </p>
				<p>However, it became apparent that we were talking about
				different things, the central point of the difference being the issue of whether one was
				claiming to practice a form of medicine with a capacity to make diagnoses and to focus
				treatment on those diagnoses or one was offering some general routine of treatment for
				general well-being. I was talking about the former and they were talking about the
				latter. Indeed, they were shocked that we, in UK, were allowed to be talking about
				the latter.</p>
				<p>They explained that words like; medicine, treatment,
				diagnosis, even massage, were 'owned' by orthodox medicine and any trespass could start
				one on a journey to the local slammer.</p>
				<p> They were of the opinion that the legal authorities
				would not initiate such a course but would have to proceed if the orthodox profession were
				to complain about ones work -and said the orthodox profession had a reputation for
				protecting their special position jealously. Claude Didier, as President of
				the now defunct French Shiatsu Association has made that journey a few times in defence of
				members who have been the subjects of complaints by doctors.</p>
				<p>In the late-90's, after I had given up my intention to move
				to France, I became the UK representative to the European Shiatsu Federation and my first
				task was to interview every national representative and setdown the political and
				legal situation for Shiatsu in each country. In this exercise I discovered that my
				earlier information about France was accurate and was about the middle standard of
				restriction for the countries of mainland Europe - Austria was the worst and Sweden was
				the easiest.</p>
				<p>Although there have been many developments in many
				countries, it was not clear to me that this central issue had changed to any great
				degree and, so, I attended the 2004 European Shiatsu Congress in Kiental, Switzerland.</p>
				<p> As each national presentation was made I asked the
				key questions:</p>
				<p>Can you use words like medicine, treatment, diagnosis?</p>
				<p>Can you make diagnoses? </p>
				<p>Can you offer treatments focussed by diagnoses? </p>
				<p>Can you offer to treat specific pathological conditions? </p>
				<p>Apart from Sweden and UK/Ireland the answer was 'no'.
				Some people seemed to be seeking a redefinition of Shiatsu to make such issues irrelevant.</p>
				<p>If there is to be harmonisation of the legal position of
				complementary medicine across the EU, then concerns must be taken seriously. </p>
				<p>The weight of the many mainland countries would outgun the
				obscure common law tradition of the UK and Ireland; add to this the knowledge of what
				happened to the Lannoye Report, which was changed about so much by the European Parliament
				that Paul Lannoye refused to let it go forward in his name, as a result of the fact that
				the largest single occupational group in the European Parliament is orthodox doctors.</p>
				<p>It is for these reasons I think it relevant to cite the
				European perspective when seeking to justify the creation of a regulatory body for
				Shiatsu. If you have information that could update what I have said or, even better,
				change what I have said, please let us know about it. We all have members with
				interests in mainland Europe and want to give them the best advice.</p>
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