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Source of article found on NewsWire: http://tinyurl.com/4cfht

New Help for People with Parkinson's and other Movement Disorders;
Presentation Feb. 9 at National Press Club in Washington

To: Health Reporter

Contact: Karen Bradley, 202-669-3927

WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 /U.S. Newswire/ -- People with Parkinson's are finding
new help to cope with the challenges of their disease thanks to a new
program developed by Professor Janet Hamburg, Chair of the Dance Department
at the University of Kansas.

Professor Hamburg, a Certified Movement Analyst (CMA), today demonstrated a
new groundbreaking exercise regimen used successfully on Parkinson's
patients that improves quality of life and maintains a fuller range of
movement. The exercises can result in increased energy even if used only 36
minutes a day.

Hamburg developed the program in 2002 after realizing that exercise programs
that were simple and fun, and yet effective, were not available to many,
especially those who were homebound or restricted in their ability to enjoy
moving. "Traditional exercises are limiting in their use of space," Hamburg
explained, "and they keep people from developing or recovering a full range
of movement." "People think of exercise as strength and flexibility
training, but there is benefit in other forms of movement," Hamburg
explained. Unlike typical exercise routines, Hamburg's program
employs/involves expressive as well as functional movement, and builds the
mover's capacity for increased energy and enjoyment.

"Unfortunately, the typical exercises a patient is given tend to focus on
the pie-shaped wedge of space directly in front of us," said Hamburg. "They
don't acknowledge the 360-degree sphere of space around our bodies. An
important part of life is moving fully in this sphere. The spines of most
people with Parkinson's tend to fold forward and downward; as we age, we
pull in, our limbs shorten. If we don't work to maintain our ability to move
fully in our 360-degree world, we literally will fold in on ourselves as we
age."

Hamburg's work has been heralded by the Parkinson's Disease Foundation,
based at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. According to Robin Anthony
Elliott, Executive Director of the group, "This is a major contribution to
the education of people with Parkinson's and to meeting their needs in the
areas of quality of life and well-being." He called the work "fun," adding,
"It's not taking your medicine." Ruth Hagestuen, Director of Field Services
for the National Parkinson's Foundation in Miami, says, "There's something
about doing movement to music together that creates energy that lifts the
spirit. The combination of a really good leader -- Janet contributes
enormously to this -- may motivate people to be more faithful about doing
this than other kinds of exercise they've been assigned to do."

Hamburg's program is now accessible to Parkinson's patients and care
providers on a DVD, Motivating Moves for People with Parkinson's.
http://www.motivatingmoves.com

Parkinson's sufferers are only one group of many who are benefiting from new
applications of Laban Movement Analysis. Dr. Suzi Tortora, a CMA and
dance/movement therapist, joined Hamburg today in a joint presentation at
the National Press Club. She has been using her own approach in working with
children who are struggling with limitations or challenges to their movement
abilities. Her forthcoming book, The Dancing Dialog: Using the Communicative
Power of Movement with Young Children, will be published in August 2005.

Tortora emphasized the power of analyzing a child's nonverbal style and
"movement vocabulary" in order to understand "how that child organizes her
experience of the world." In Tortora's view, "Each individual's nonverbal
actions are choreography that become personal movement signatures." In
observing and interacting with her clients, Tortora says she always asks,
"What does it feel like to experience the world through that child's
particular expressive movement repertoire? The answers are always revealing,
not only of the challenges that a child may face, but also of a peek into
how that child copes, overcomes, and succeeds against odds." (See
http://www.suzitortora.org )

The techniques Hamburg and Tortora use draw on the work of Rudolf Laban, a
20th-century dance artist and theorist, and the developer of a widely used
notation system for movement; and Irmgard Bartenieff, a student of Laban's
who was also a renowned physical therapist.

Laban and Bartenieff developed ways to analyze and name aspects of movement
based on functional and expressive behaviors of people moving in time and
space; a "map" of all of human movement. Certified Movement Analysts like
Hamburg and Tortora apply this movement analysis to many fields including
sports, dance, theatre, anthropology, and therapy.

Today's presentation was sponsored by the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of
Movement Studies, the center for training Certified Movement Analysts around
the world. http://www.limsonline.org

http://www.usnewswire.com/

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