The CSP’s membership is made up of a range of physiotherapy professionals: qualified and retired physiotherapists, students of physiotherapy and associate members. CSP members work in a variety of settings across the NHS, in the community, in private practice and in sports. Members are entitled to use postnominals 'MCSP'; fellows 'FCSP'.
Aims of the society
The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy's stated aims are to:
protect and further advance the interests and working lives of its members
raise the profile of the profession and awareness of the benefits physiotherapy offers in preventing ill health, increasing independence for people with long term conditions, and rehabilitation after illness and accident.
Foundation
The Society was established in 1894 as the Society of Trained Masseuses by four nurses - Lucy Marianne Robinson, Rosalind Paget, Elizabeth Anne Manley and Margaret Dora Palmer - who wished to protect their profession after stories in the press warned young nurses and the public of unscrupulous people offering massage as a euphemism for other services. In 1894 the British Medical Association inquired into the education and practice of massage practitioners in London, and found that prostitution was commonly associated with unskilled workers and debt, often working with forged qualifications. In response to what became known as "the Massage Scandals of 1894", legitimate massage workers formed the Society of Trained Masseuses, with an emphasis on high academic standards and a medical model for massage training. In 1900 the Society acquired the legal and public status of a professional organisation and became the Incorporated Society of Trained Masseuses. Under the new name of the Chartered Society of Massage and Remedial Gymnasts the society was granted a Royal Charter by King George V on 11 June 1920. In the same year the Society amalgamated with the Institute of Massage and Remedial Gymnastics. The society adopted its present name in 1944.
The society supports research into physiotherapy through the CSP Charitable Trust which funds the Physiotherapy Research Foundation. It works to build knowledge in the professions by funding research to inform clinical practice and clinical effectiveness and build research capacity in the profession by providing new researchers with opportunities to gain funding to enhance their research skills and experience. The society is a member of Consortium of Independent Health Information Libraries in London, and its members benefit from this through preferential rates for journal purchases.
Structure and governance
The CSP is organised into nations and regions of the UK, through English Regional Networks and National Boards of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The CSP has offices in London, Belfast, Edinburgh and Cardiff. The CSP’s elected governing body is the CSP Council which identifies and agrees CSP policy and strategy. It includes representatives from the English Regions Network, National Boards. The work of the Council is directed by the Industrial Relations Committee and the Practice and Development Committee.