The Thinking Practitioner

161: Science, Skepticism, & Keeping Heart (with Paul Ingraham)

10 snips
Jan 7, 2026
Paul Ingraham, a science writer and former massage therapist at PainScience.com, brings his sharp skepticism to the table. He explores the tension between client satisfaction and real clinical effectiveness, revealing how false narratives can harm patients. Ingraham discusses the pitfalls of modality identities in therapy and the need for scientific humility. He emphasizes the importance of evidence-based practice while urging clinicians to embrace the complexities of pain care, ultimately encouraging a balance of artistry and science in therapy.
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INSIGHT

What Massage Research Actually Shows

  • Solid evidence for specific mechanisms of massage therapy is scarce, especially for pain relief.
  • Paul highlights the clearest evidence: massage reliably reduces anxiety and depression, but mechanism remains unclear.
INSIGHT

Pain Care Is Broadly Uncertain

  • The lack of strong evidence for massage treating pain reflects a wider problem across pain care.
  • Paul stresses that many healthcare professions face similar uncertainty about what actually works for pain.
ADVICE

Hone Technique Even Without Clear Mechanisms

  • Continue refining hands-on skill because technique complexity and delivery quality matter even when mechanisms are unknown.
  • Focus on the shared active ingredients across techniques: craftsmanship, explanation, and compassionate delivery.
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