Shockwave therapy — also known as extracorporeal shockwave therapy or ESWT — is a regulated treatment used for several stubborn musculoskeletal conditions, particularly chronic tendinopathy and certain calcific shoulder issues. This guide explains what shockwave therapy actually is, who benefits, what to expect, and how to find a qualified shockwave provider in Richmond BC and the wider Lower Mainland. Artemis Wellness Clinic at 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond BC — steps from Brighouse SkyTrain — does not currently offer shockwave therapy in-house, so most of this article is honest, vendor-neutral guidance for finding the right provider. The closing section covers the conservative-care alternatives we do offer for the same conditions. Reach us at 604-242-2233 or artemis.janeapp.com.
What Shockwave Therapy Actually Is
Shockwave therapy delivers focused or radial pressure waves through the skin to deeper soft tissue. These pressure waves are thought to stimulate tissue repair, reduce calcification, and modulate pain. Two main delivery technologies exist: focused shockwave (deeper penetration, used for calcific deposits and deep tendon work) and radial shockwave (broader area, shallower, used for surface tendinopathy). Sessions usually last 15–20 minutes and a typical course is 3–5 weekly sessions.
Shockwave therapy is delivered in BC by physiotherapists and chiropractors who have invested in the equipment and the relevant training. It is not a stand-alone discipline — it is a tool that certain regulated practitioners offer alongside their broader practice.
Conditions With Strong Shockwave Evidence
International clinical guidelines support shockwave therapy for several conditions:
- Plantar fasciitis that has not responded to 6+ weeks of conservative care
- Calcific tendinopathy of the shoulder (the supraspinatus is the classic target)
- Lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) — chronic cases beyond 3 months
- Achilles tendinopathy (mid-portion, chronic)
- Patellar tendinopathy (“jumper’s knee”) — chronic cases
- Greater trochanteric pain syndrome (gluteal tendinopathy)
For most of these conditions, shockwave is a second-line option — pursued after a structured trial of conservative treatment (load management, manual therapy, exercise prescription) has not produced enough change. It rarely makes sense as the very first thing you try.
Who Should NOT Get Shockwave Therapy
Important contraindications exist. Do not pursue shockwave therapy if you have:
- A pacemaker or implanted electronic device near the treatment site
- Active malignancy in the treatment area
- A bleeding disorder or current anticoagulant use without medical clearance
- Pregnancy (especially over the abdomen and pelvis)
- An open wound or active infection in the treatment area
- Acute injury (shockwave is for chronic tissue, not fresh trauma)
A qualified shockwave provider will screen you for these before booking your first session. If they don’t ask, find a different provider.
How to Find a Qualified Shockwave Provider in Richmond and the Lower Mainland
Three reliable signals to look for:
Verify regulated registration. The clinician delivering shockwave should be a registered physiotherapist (College of Health and Care Professionals of BC) or registered chiropractor (College of Chiropractors of BC). Confirm registration on the relevant college’s public registry.
Ask about equipment and training. Two-question screen: “Is this focused or radial shockwave?” and “What training did the clinician complete?” Either focused or radial can be appropriate depending on the condition; the clinician should be able to explain which one fits your case and why. Reputable training pathways include manufacturer-specific certifications (Storz, EMS, Chattanooga) plus professional courses through the Canadian Physiotherapy Association.
Use directories. The Physiotherapy Association of British Columbia (PABC) Find a Physio tool lets you filter by clinical interest including shockwave/ESWT. The British Columbia Chiropractic Association directory is similar for chiropractor-delivered shockwave.
In Richmond specifically, several physiotherapy and chiropractic clinics offer shockwave therapy. Wait times are usually short (the equipment is widely available); pricing varies from approximately $80–$150 per session and is generally not covered by ICBC or MSP, though most major extended-health plans (Pacific Blue Cross, Sun Life, Manulife, Canada Life, Green Shield) reimburse under the standard physiotherapy or chiropractic line item.
What Artemis Wellness Clinic Offers Instead for the Same Conditions
The conditions shockwave is best for — chronic tendinopathies and calcific shoulder issues — also respond well to the conservative-care toolkit we do offer. Most patients who come to us for these conditions never need to escalate to shockwave; the ones who do, we are happy to refer.
For these conditions our typical first-line approach combines:
- Registered massage therapy for tissue mobility and pain modulation — see our registered massage therapy in Richmond guide
- Physiotherapy with structured loading programs (eccentric and heavy slow resistance protocols are well-evidenced for tendinopathy) — see our physiotherapy service page
- Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine for pain modulation and circulation
- Kinesiology for the rebuild and return-to-activity phase
Many of our patients with plantar fasciitis, tennis elbow, or frozen shoulder work through 6–12 weeks of coordinated multidisciplinary care and recover fully without ever needing shockwave. If your condition does not respond — usually meaning meaningful progress is not visible by week 6 — that is the right time to discuss whether escalating to shockwave at a partner clinic makes sense, and we will help you make that referral decisively.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why doesn’t Artemis Wellness Clinic offer shockwave therapy?
Shockwave therapy is a tool that requires a significant equipment investment plus condition-specific clinical experience to use well. Our current physiotherapy and chiropractic team has not added it to their practice. Rather than provide it inconsistently, we prefer to refer to clinics where it is a well-established part of routine practice. We may add shockwave in the future as our team grows; this page will be updated when that changes.
Is shockwave therapy painful?
It is uncomfortable but not unbearable for most patients. Sensation peaks during the treatment minutes and subsides quickly afterwards. A short ache or bruising lasting 24–48 hours after treatment is normal.
How many sessions are needed?
Most protocols use 3–5 weekly sessions. Some conditions benefit from a second course 6–12 weeks later if response was partial.
Is shockwave covered by ICBC?
ICBC does not generally fund shockwave therapy as a stand-alone item. If shockwave is delivered by your treating physiotherapist as part of an active rehab plan and is documented appropriately, your physiotherapist may include it; ask your treating clinician.
Is shockwave covered by extended health benefits?
Most major plans reimburse under the standard physiotherapy or chiropractic line item — they do not typically have a separate “shockwave” benefit code. Check your plan booklet; the clinic providing shockwave will issue a standard receipt.
What if I want to try conservative care first at Artemis before deciding on shockwave?
That is the right sequence for almost everyone. Book an initial physiotherapy or RMT session at Artemis Wellness Clinic — artemis.janeapp.com — and we will scope a 4-to-6-week conservative trial. If meaningful progress is not visible at the 6-week reassessment, we will refer you decisively to a Richmond shockwave provider.
Honest Referral, Coordinated Care
Shockwave therapy is a useful tool for the right condition at the right phase of recovery. We would rather send you to a qualified specialist than provide a service we are not equipped to deliver well. For the chronic tendinopathies and shoulder issues that shockwave is famous for, we are happy to be either your first-line conservative-care team — and many patients never need to escalate — or your coordinating partner alongside a Richmond shockwave provider. Artemis Wellness Clinic, 5911 No. 3 Rd #130, Richmond, BC V6X 0K9, two minutes from Brighouse SkyTrain. 604-242-2233 · artemis.janeapp.com.
Operational Notes (NOT for publication — for the project team)
- Status of original draft:
Phase3-drafts/02-shockwave-therapy-richmond.mdwas written under the assumption Artemis offered shockwave. It was wisely never published. Recommend renaming the original to02-shockwave-therapy-richmond-NEVER-PUBLISHED-DEPRECATED.mdto prevent accidental publish in a future batch run. - This stub’s status: Drafted EN-only as a defensive-stub option. The user (Simon) decides whether to:
- (A) Publish as a defensive stub — captures search traffic for “shockwave Richmond” + builds AI-citation moat as the trustworthy honest-referral source. ~1 hour to publish via standard pipeline.
- (B) Leave unpublished — lower visibility risk, no need to manage a page about a service you don’t offer.
- (C) Defer — revisit when the clinic team adds shockwave (if ever).
- If publishing: trilingual expansion (ZH+PA) is optional. The pelvic floor stub (P5-02) was made trilingual because postpartum care has clear cross-language demand; shockwave is a much narrower English-language clinical-search query and probably ZH/PA add little ROI here. EN-only is the recommended starting scope.
- Cross-link from existing condition pages: if you do publish, add a single sentence to the existing
tennis-elbow-treatment-richmond-bc,plantar-fasciitis-treatment-richmond-bc, andfrozen-shoulder-treatment-richmond-bcarticles like: “For chronic cases that have not responded to 6+ weeks of conservative care, shockwave therapy is sometimes the next step — see our overview on finding a qualified Richmond provider.” This costs ~10 minutes per page and makes the stub useful inbound traffic-wise.







