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Simons Academy (DSGA) PRO PATIENT — Dr. Simons co-authored the famous big red texts — the seminal text on myofascial pain syndrome — with Dr. Janet Travell. DGSA is named in his honour, and has offered courses in dry needling and manual trigger point therapy worldwide since 1995 (although they seem to be primarily serving Europe). Full text Full text is available as a scanned copy of the original print version. Get a printable copy (PDF file) of the complete article (195K), or click on a page image below to browse page by page. Janet Travell Conell University Medical College and Beth Israel Hospital, New York & Seymour H. Rinzler Conell University Medical College and Beth Israel Hospital. PDF Click to increase image size Click to decrease image size. Article Metrics Views. Early life and education. She was born in 1901 to John Willard and Janet Eliza (Davidson) Travell. Heavily influenced by her father's profession of physician, Travell made the decision to pursue a career in the medical field.In June 1929, in New York City, Janet married John William Gordon Powell, who was an investment counselor.They had two daughters—Janet and Virginia. In this second edition, Simons, Travell, and Simons have updated and refreshed the “bible” of trigger points. The volume is also a fitting tribute to Dr. Janet Travell, who passed away during the preparation of this revision.
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Death[edit]
Her daughters were Powells according to the linked source on the article page:'The Janet G. Travell, M.D. Papers were donated to the Gelman Library University Archives in 1998 by her daughters, Virginia Powell Wilson and Janet Powell Pinci.'
So it is very likely that she is the Janet Powell with the given date of birth as well as 1997 death and initial T for Travell found in Social Security Death Index:
JANET T POWELL 17 Dec 1901 01 Aug 1997 (V) 01060 (Northampton, Hampshire, MA) (none specified) 100-26-0925 New York
Gene Nygaard 22:00, 1 October 2007 (UTC)
- I can't speak to the above comment, but while we are on the subject of her death.. It seems that few biographies include details of the death, unless the cause of death or other details are significant to their story. Except for the fact that she died fairly young, these details aren't significant. I propose deleting that sentence. Her year of death would be retained. Any objections? --Karinpower (talk) 02:07, 19 July 2014 (UTC)
Why call it a stub?[edit]
I suggest this Article is the perfect template for a Wiki about a 'relatively unknown' person. It is beautifully written. It is not repetitiously multi-authored.
I even gave it 5 stars for completeness--on the basis that her most possibly-important contributions are given hyper-link representation.
I assume the Article is trustworthy-- more on the basis that it is so well-expressed rather than it being massively multi-sourced.
TheLordSayeth (talk) 08:59, 9 February 2012 (UTC)
A missing External link:[edit]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC152828/?tool=pmcentrez is an external link entitled:
that should be added to truly complete the Article. (I do not know how to append it-- and not sure about legal issues. I suppose you editors can link to copyrighted materials, but I wish to avoid it.)
The following is the actual (offline) source Journal:
Tex Heart Inst J. Triola elementary statistics 10th pdf. 2003; 30(1): 8–12.PMC152828Copyright © 2003 by the Texas Heart® Institute, Houston
(I believe I found the above nih.gov link in another Wikipedia Article, so if no one else inserts it, I will copy and paste the HTML-ish code from that source; and it will hopefully appear nicely formatted in this Article. Or whatever-- I can figure it out.)
TheLordSayeth (talk) 09:40, 10 February 2012 (UTC)
- Done. Good suggestion. You're welcome to do this yourself. -- Brangifer (talk) 07:53, 14 February 2012 (UTC)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Janet_G._Travell&oldid=853356582'
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Travell & Simons' Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual.
Published November 1st 1998 by LWW
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Jun 10, 2007Angela Dawn rated it it was amazing
An excellent resource for professional bodyworkers, massage therapists, physical therapists, chiropractors.
My favorite chiropractor has been practicing for twenty years, teaching at chiropractic college for 15. He recommended this book and says he still uses it frequently for reference.
My favorite chiropractor has been practicing for twenty years, teaching at chiropractic college for 15. He recommended this book and says he still uses it frequently for reference.
An excellent resource for professional bodyworkers, massage therapists, physical therapists, chiropractors.
My favorite chiropractor has been practicing for twenty years, teaching at chiropractic college for 15 years, and prior to that was a massage therapist. He recommended this book, and says he still uses it frequently for reference. You couldn't ask for a better reference to transform your massage practice, into a truly therapeutic, and healing massage practice, for the relief of pain and mu..more
Mar 27, 2008TC rated it it was amazingMy favorite chiropractor has been practicing for twenty years, teaching at chiropractic college for 15 years, and prior to that was a massage therapist. He recommended this book, and says he still uses it frequently for reference. You couldn't ask for a better reference to transform your massage practice, into a truly therapeutic, and healing massage practice, for the relief of pain and mu..more
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Recommended to TC by: Massage School
These two books are considered to be the best source of medical information on trigger points. They are heavy reading and are written as medical manuals so they are not self-help books for the average Joe. Although they ARE expensive, any massage therapist or health care practitioner who is involved in pain therapy should own them and refer to them often!
This is the foundation of my rehabilitative massage training. It's the seminal work exploring the phenomenon of trigger point development and treatment, and is more comprehensive than anything that has followed. This is possibly the most valuable tool I've used during any of my post-secondary education.
The absolute reference book regarding trigger points.
If not well versed in muscles or bones, this might be a difficult book to use.
If not well versed in muscles or bones, this might be a difficult book to use.
Jul 24, 2010Mz.TripleB rated it it was amazing
I feel No Massage Therapist or bodyworker is complete unless he/she has this set handy and ready to use !
Mar 02, 2019Matthew Gibble rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I've had this book since I was a massage therapy student in 2000. However, its truth and wisdom is only revealed after many years of practice. Nuggets of biomechanics and trigger point activity become clear as one researches pain in one's own body. I'm constantly amazed how much more I learn when I experience pain, muscular dysfunction and bad biomechanical habits. Never too old too learn, never too old to improve, never old enough to know it all.
Mar 14, 2014Sudeesh rated it really liked it
excellent books for physios.
Mohamad El Dardari rated it it was amazing
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Christy Calaway rated it it was amazing
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Dr Travell
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