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Hydrotherapy is one of the oldest health treatments. It
involves the use of water for soothing pains and treating diseases.
The use of hot tubs is a traditional method for the treatment of disease
and injury in many cultures, including those of ancient Greece, Rome,
China, Japan and Native America.
The Oldest Hot Tub
The oldest known spa still is in Merano Italy where
there is evidence of organized use of the hot springs dating back to
3000 BC. It is quite possible that people soaked their tired feet in
the steaming pools of ancient geysers even earlier than 5000 years ago!
Egyptians Hot Tubs
Archaeological evidence shows that as early as 2,000 BC, hot
therapeutic baths were enjoyed by the Egyptians and that members of the
ruling class would bathe in hot waters infused with essential oils and
flowers for rejuvenating effects. Perhaps the first known hot tub was
chiselled of solid granite for King Phraortes of ancient Persia (then
called Media) in about 600 BC. Sizzling stones were placed in his
tub to heat the water.
Greeks Hot Tubs
The ancient Greeks were also very fond of hot tubs and, by the time of
Hippocrates in around 400BC, hot tub bathing was regarded as
having definite healing properties.
Greco-Roman medicine was based on the theory of humors.
This theory held that the human body was filled with four basic
substances which are in balance when a person is health and that all
diseases and disabilities resulted from an excess or deficit of one of
these four humors. (The four humors were identified as black bile, bile,
phlegm, and blood - nice!). Using a combination of hot and cold baths
the bodily humors could be adjusted - heating, cooling, moistening, and
drying as deemed necessary - to bring them into harmony. Hot tubs were
considered beneficial for most patients and this therapeutic use of spas
and hot tubs was remarkably long-lived, spanning the entire classical
period. This popularity was no doubt partly due to the fact that baths
were both pleasant and comparatively freely available.
Roman Hot Tubs
Roman hot baths were regarded not only as places for
cleansing and socialising but also as centres of medical treatment. The
Romans used thermal baths in numerous treatments, including soothing the
chest and back pains from pneumonia, promoting good respiration and
relieving fatigue.
Asclepiades, a Greek physician who practiced in Rome
around 100BC, was a forceful advocate of the use of both cold and
hot tubs in regimens for both the sick and the healthy. Like
Hippocrates, he though that baths had power to regulate the balance of
the body and he recommended their use in the treatment of many different
diseases.
Hot tubs were also used at this time for relaxation from
both physical and mental stress.
Over time health spas were built across the Roman Empire, from Africa to
England. These evolved gradually into full-scale entertainment complexes
featuring sports arenas, massage parlours, restaurants, and even the
occasional brothel!
The word SPA is actually an acronym originating from
when battle weary legionnaires tried to find a way to recover from their
military wounds and ailments. They sought out hot springs and then built
baths or hot tubs there to heal their aching bodies. They named
these bathing treatments "Sanus Per Aquam" (SPA) meaning "health through
water." The Belgian town of Spa was founded for this purpose and
was renowned throughout Europe in the 14th century. It is still in
existence today as a spa town.
The Birth of Modern Hydrotherapy
Early pioneers of modern hydrotherapy in Europe were Sir
John Floyer who wrote a treatise in 1697 - 'An enquiry into the right
use and abuse of hot, cold and temperate baths', and John Wesley, the
founder of Methodism, who published a book on hydrotherapy in 1747, and
called it an easy and natural way of curing most diseases. He was,
unfortunately, rather more keen to advocate cold baths than hot!
A Bavarian monk, Sebastian Kneipp, further revived
hydrotherapy during the 19th century. He is most commonly associated
with the "Kneipp Cure" form of hydrotherapy, a system of healing
involving the application of water through various methods, temperatures
and pressures. Germans still practice his methods today and there are
Kneipp spas in sixty German cities.
Asian Hot Tubs
Hot water's healing power has been revered for thousands of years in
Asian culture, from China to Japan. The Japanese even have a saying,
known as Mizu-no-Kokoro which translates: Mind Like Water, referring to
a peaceful state of being in harmony with all things.
Hot water bathing in freestanding wooden hot tubs called
ofuro has been a Japanese family custom for centuries. It originates
from the concept that human beings experience the best possible
conditions during gestation. Therefore, the tub is at least 2 feet deep,
so that the person's spinal column is completely submerged and the body
assumes a fetal position.
The Japenese ofuro is placed in an open space preferably
outdoors, amidst nature.
The use of freestanding wooden hot tubs spread to the
USA with the soldiers returning from World War II.
American Hot Tubs
the 1950s the first home hot tubs began to appear, mostly in California,
USA. These hot tubs were makeshift vessels crafted from old
redwood water tanks and discarded wine barrels. By 1965 hippies began
flooding the coast of California with little money, and lots of free
time on their hands and they started the proliferation of wooden hot
tubs. Most of these tubs were homemade with smoke-belching wood
fired heaters. Water circulation, filtration, and sanitation were a
little hit and miss.
When the shortcomings of wooden hot tubs became
apparent, the first fibreglass shell hot tubs began to appear on the
market around 1970. The gel-coat fibreglass construction had
its own drawbacks, and was soon replaced by cast acrylic shells and, for
the first time, it was easy for the owner to achieve water cleanliness.
Manufacturers installed pumps, filters, control systems and, of course,
jets, although the first hot tubs had very few of them.
Medicinal Hot Tubs
Thousands of years of using hot tubs for treatment have
built an enormous amount of expertise, but the alleged benefits had
little supporting evidence from science until approximately 30 years
ago. More recently, a 2006 survey of research published in 'Annals of
the Rheumatic Diseases' discusses the vast amount of high-quality
studies showing the effectiveness of hydrotherapy.
Hot tubs are routinely used by the medical professions
today to treat rheumatic diseases, musculoskeletal disorders such as
arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, or spinal cord injuries and to
help patients suffering spasticity, stroke and paralysis.
Hot tubs are also now commonly used to treat orthopaedic
and neurological conditions in dogs and horses. |