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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You explain that you can't do the full treatment.

This is the real-life decision made by rolfer Jaret Leah. It's the responsibility of a rolfer to filter out patients that might be harmed by treatment. You might be able to do part of your program with some clients, but not all of it.

"You can't just work on anybody if they're willing to pay you. You have to have some discrimination," Leah says. "Someone with bad varicose veins, it would be unsafe to work on them because you could make their health worse."

Sometimes clients can't go through an entire program because they have heart trouble or cancer. If they have cancer, rolfing could actually spread the disease.

If a patient is harmed, the rolfer could be sued. It also goes against the principles of rolfing.

"You're in the health profession," Leah says. "You don't want to cause someone harm."


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