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The
American Association for the Advancement of Tension Control
was founded in 1973 as an interdisciplinary effort encompassing
the fields of dentistry, education, medicine, physical therapy,
psychology, and speech pathology. The broad purpose was
to facilitate the acquisition, dissemination, and application
of sound knowledge for the benefit of society throughout
the world.
Name
changes were first to the International Stress and Tension-Control
Association and then to the International Stress Management
Association (ISMA) whereupon international meetings were
held in 1979, 1981, 1983, 1988, 1992, 1995 1996 and 2001.
In 1973, Edmund Jacobson, Ph.D., M.D. (1888-1983) asked
F. J. McGuigan, (1924-1998) through Professor Marigold Edwards,
to develop an Association for the Advancement of Tension
Control. Jacobson modeled the title after the American Association
for the Advancement of Science.
The
general purpose of the association is to facilitate the
acquisition and dissemination of scientific knowledge about
tension control, with emphasis on technological applications
for the benefit of society throughout the world. The public
is encouraged to use only relaxation approaches that satisfy
the highest criteria of scientific and clinical validation.
Principally, validation of a method is that it reduces muscle
tension electromyographically measured, using sound methodology.
Clinical validation is that as muscle tension is reduced,
complaints are alienated or eliminated. Electromyography
is a major tool because the classical, standard definition
of tension is the contraction of striated muscle fibers
just as relaxation is their elongation. There were no set
requirements for membership, such as a minimal level of
academic degree or field of specialization.
The
first meeting of the association was held at the Bismarck
Hotel in Chicago in 1974. Annual meetings continued to be
held at the Bismarck Hotel in Chicago through 1978.
In
1979 the Association sponsored its first international conference
organized primarily by Joe MacDonald Wallace, Director for
Europe, at the West London Institute of Higher Education.
The organization's name was changed to the International
Stress and Tension Control Association.
Today
ISMA has branches around
the world: Australasia, Brazil, France, Hong Kong, India,
Japan, The Netherlands, Russia, the United Kingdom and the
United States.
The
International Stress Management Association is the oldest
ongoing international organization for stress management
and with its international branches promises to fulfill
its original purposes of 1974 of bringing relief from stress-tension
disorders to the peoples of the world.
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