Pain Management & Deep Relaxation through Muscle & Connective Tissue Therapy Saint Louis Bowen Therapy
Affton, MO 63123
ph: 314-703-9542
sara
History of Tom Bowen (Tom Bowen working on a client)
Thomas Ambrose Bowen was born on April 18th, 1916 in Brunswick, Victoria, Australia.
From the 1950's until his death on October 27th, 1982, he developed his unique soft-tissue therapeutic technique that is now known as The Bowen Technique. (A.K.A. Bowtech, Bowen, Bowenwork, and numerous other variations.)
Tom Bowen was not formally trained in any medical or alternative therapy discipline. He stated simply that his work was 'a gift from God'; nevertheless, he considered himself to be an osteopath since his assessment and treatment of each patient reflected the complete physiological situation presenting in the moment.
It was through his general love of sports and his regular attendance at football games that Tom Bowen became interested in massage and other soft-tissue manipulation. He watched the teams' trainers treat injured players and began to learn from them. He observed that particular 'moves' on the body's soft tissue resulted in particular effects. One of the men he met at the 'footy club' was Ernie Saunders, a renowned soft-tissue 'manipulator' from a suburb of nearby Melbourne. Saunders is generally believed to have had a powerful influence on Bowen's skills with manual therapy, especially in the beginning.
One person who benefited from Tom Bowen's hands-on therapy was Rene Horwood, the wife of Stan Horwood, a friend of Bowen's from the Geelong Cement Works. (Note: Rene is short for Irene, Mrs. Horwood's middle name, and rhymes with Irene.) The Horwoods credited Rene's recovery from a stroke to Bowen's hands-on therapy. In 1957, they invited him to use their home for seeing patients in the evenings after work. The front room of their home at 100 Autumn Street, Geelong, Geelong became Tom Bowen's first clinic.
Stan Horwood died a few months after Bowen began seeing patients. As Stan had requested, Rene looked after Tom. She acted as his mentor, receptionist, and business manager for all but two of the 26 years of Bowen's practice. Rene, who had run a successful hairdressing business in Melbourne, also helped Bowen develop some of his techniques. She outlived him by almost 19 years, dying in September 2001 at the age of 93.
Bowen did not advertise his work but relied instead on word-of-mouth recommendations. Nevertheless, patients often queued up in the front yard until 3 o'clock in the morning waiting to be treated.
When demand for Bowen's therapy outgrew the one-room clinic on Autumn Street, Tom and Rene rented a larger clinic on Latrobe Terrace. All told, Bowen practiced out of five successive clinics, all in Geelong: the first on Autumn Street, then two on Latrobe Terrace and the last one on Villamantr Street.
Click here for details about Tom Bowen's style of working in his clinics.
Tom Bowen treated an average of 14 patients per hour. Two main factors account for his ability to work at this phenomenal pace:
(Note: Today, Bowen practitioners do not work at that rate; most see from one to six clients per hour. Without Tom Bowen's assessment skills, most practitioners need three, four, or more sessions to get the results that Tom Bowen often achieved in one or two. Even so, the Bowen Technique is remarkable for the speed with which it stimulates healing and the length of time that the results last.)
Before Tom Bowen rented his first outside clinic, he went to the authorities to register his practice. They told him that only physiotherapists (Physical Therapists) were required to register; if he called himself anything else, he wouldn't have to register. He called himself an osteopath because that was his philosophical and practical approach to healing. In the early 1970s, however, the regulations were changed; osteopaths, chiropractors, and naturopaths would be required to be licensed and to register with the government. Bowen applied for registration as an osteopath. He passed the practical requirements with flying colors but was denied on other grounds: not having a diploma from a registered academy and refusing to answer abstract questions -- saying instead that he had to see and touch clients in order to know which moves would be appropriate in each particular case. After being denied recognition as an osteopath, he changed his title from 'osteopath' to 'manual therapist'.
Tom Bowen was demoralized by this rejection, in part because his patients would not become eligible for insurance coverage for his treatments. His concern for his patients' wellbeing and his lack of interest in money were legendary. Click here for more examples of his generosity.
*Information taken from www.bowtech.com
Research
Exciting research is emerging from all around the world on the therapeutic effect of Bowen Therapy and the physiological changes that take place in the body. These evidence-based projects cover some of the wide range of conditions as Bowen Therapy has been shown to assist. While some of the results have been published, other work is in the form of unpublished theses, data collection or evaluations.
Modern health care is implemented on the basis of evidence-based practice. The most impressive forms of research are the double-blind trials in which neither the practitioner nor the client knows who is getting what treatment. Physiological changes in the body can be demonstrated in a technological double blind trial. However therapeutic Bowen Therapy cannot be tested in this way because it is virtually impossible to disguise the treatments.
Click here for a summary of the research done to date.
Saint Louis Bowen Therapy
Affton, MO 63123
ph: 314-703-9542
sara