came in contact with, including your table, face cradle, stool, bolsters, door knobs, side tables, chairs, etc. Follow more stringent state or regulatory agency protocols as required. Following the product manufacturer’s recommendations for contact time (or how long a surface must stay visibly wet before the disinfectant destroys the pathogen). Per CDC recommendations, clean all equipment, devices, and surfaces between each client interaction, including oil or lotion dispensers. Repeat your handwashing protocol and reset the massage chair/table and treatment space for next client. Treatment Room & Office Readiness Clean Do a deep clean of all spaces. Use EPA-approved cleaning products and protocols on all surfaces in your space, top to bottom. Follow the disinfectant contact time, per the product manufacturer. Clean bolsters, tables, chairs, and stools as directed by the CDC and product manufacturer. Certain porous materials can start to break down with repeated chemical disinfectant use. Barrier protections might be in order for tables, chairs, and bolsters. Clean light fixtures and switches; doorknobs, doors, and door frames. Have hand sanitizer, cleaning wipes, and facial tissues available in space. Have disposable paper towels or a standing wipe dispenser available to use when handling doorknobs. In-Session Protocols Much of what you know about sanitation and hygiene will remain in place, but there are several new considerations to navigate, including taking a client’s temperature, working with a mask, and making sure a client is comfortable while wearing a mask. Practitioner Preparedness Hygiene protocols remain standard and customary. The CDC recommends you take steps to ensure everyone adheres to respiratory hygiene, cough etiquette, and hand hygiene. Provide supplies for respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette, including alcohol-based hand rub (ABHR) with 60%–95% alcohol, tissues, and no-touch receptacles for trash disposal. Have your mask on and adjusted before your client arrives. Keep hair up and away from your face. All other practitioner hygienic protocols apply—no long nails, jewelry, open-toe shoes, flip flops, or sandals. Practitioners should take their own temperature before each work day begins to ensure they are not presenting with any coronavirus symptoms. Avoid shaking hands with clients or hugging. Consider sharing with clients that you’ll eliminate casual conversation and remain in minimal necessary in-session conversation mode through the duration of the session. Apply a ready-made disposable face-cradle cover to your face cradle. Each client will receive a completely new setup. For more than 15 years, we have been providing on-site clothed corporate chair massage services to businesses, nonprofits and other organizations throughout the country. Impact Statement Best practices and evolving protocols are important for every integrative health discipline, especially in the time of a global pandemic. This article shares context and implications for massage therapists working in the era of COVID19. The importance of communicating patient and client indications and contraindications for touch therapies will benefit referring providers and massage practitioners. Research is limited due to the recent nature of this virus, and limited funding for massage in health care generally. Suggested research studies are discussed given the long-term and possible late-term side effects of COVID-19 survivors. This original article has never been published before and has not been, nor will be, submitted elsewhere while under consideration for publication by JACM. Introduction Massage therapy has notable characteristics to meet many of the unique needs of patients and clients during the COVID-19 pandemic.1–4 Hospital-based massage therapy, as a specialty within the larger discipline, may also be in a distinctive position to meet some additional challenges facing inpatients.5–8 Long-term side effects for survivors of COVID-19 will likely present new indications and contraindications for massage therapy, and, thereby, call for new research. Despite advantages and opportunities, the field faces challenges that other integrative medicine disciplines may not. The massage therapy discipline has made significant adjustments to ensure the safety of clients and providers, but is likely being accessed at much lower rates than prepandemic. In this column that focuses on the experience of the field in the United States, the range of effects massage therapy may provide, the challenges and opportunities of bringing massage therapy into optimal use across all populations, and the service’s delivery adaptations due to the transmissibility of SARS-CoV-2 are discussed. Recommendations for service delivery adjustments for COVID-19 survivors and suggestions for research investigation are also offered. Massage Therapists Address Presenting Conditions of Clients During the Pandemic At all times, but especially during the social restrictions of the pandemic era, massage therapists’ interventions offer direct patient care and a prolonged interaction of positive touch that may address clients’ specific pandemic-related challenging experiences. Those with conditions such as depression,1,5,9 anxiety,1,2,9–12 stress,2,13 limb edemas,14 or pain11,15–17 can especially benefit from the wide array of massage