The National Institutes of Health have recently awarded $2.6 million to fund a 5 year study on the use of hypnosis for controlling hot flashes in menopause. This is the largest grant ever awarded for this type of research.
The study will follow up on the encouraging results of a recent previous smaller study that concluded hypnosis was successful in reducing the frequency and severity of hot flashes in menopausal women.
If interested you can get the details at www.ask-the-hypnotist.com/hot-flashes-hypnosis.html.
Stephen
$2.6 Million Hypnosis Study Grant Awarded
Hypnosis and Arthritis
New support from study just in for how Hypnotherapy helps ease the pain of arthritis. More info at
http://www.ask-the-hypnotist.com/Hypnosis-blog.html.
Lots of people to help for this and good material for your marketing.
Stephen
And this too from Fox 21
Inspired by Jean's recent post re ABC's Diane Sawyer's coverage of hypnosis I thought some of you might be interested in Fox 21's recent "test" of hypnosis. Christina Salvo overcomes her snake phobia and provides a full report and blog coverage of the experience.
For those interested they can find it at:
http:/www./puebloconews.com/news/news_story.aspx?id=97880
Stephen
www.ask-the-hypnotist.com
More reasons to release those "negative" emotions
This just out from the National Institutes of Health.
People who spend their years feeling worried, tense and angry may not like how things turn out. A researcher says that, the more people do that, the greater their risk of developing mild cognitive impairment.
Mild cognitive impairment – a little forgetting or a little less clear thinking – doesn’t sound that bad. But it can be a warning of approaching Alzheimer’s disease, which is why Robert Wilson of Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center looked into it.
``What we found is that negative emotions are bad for your cognition and your risk of Alzheimer’s disease.’’
This doesn’t mean constant worry causes Alzheimer’s – just that there seems to be some connection. Wilson also says being happy doesn’t prevent it.
Stephen
Words Can Hurt
Anyhow, what happened was that researchers in the Department of Radiology there monitored over 150 video interactions of patients with their health care providers during “internventonal radiological procedures.”
Having previously noted that patients are often prepared for procedural discomforts with descriptions of pain or undesirable experiences, the researchers were interested to understand the affect of hearing such statements on patients' pain and anxiety levels. They monitored interactions to note which patients either heard statements that described painful or undesirable experiences as a warning before they actually received such potentially noxious stimuli or as an expression of sympathy after having received them.
The researchers then recorded the patients' rating of pain and anxiety after the painful event.
Result: Warning the patient in terms of pain or undesirable experiences lead to them reporting experiencing both greater pain and anxiety. Sympathizing with patients in such terms after a painful event did not increase reported pain but did result in greater patient anxiety.
Thus, contrary to common belief in the medical field and elsewhere, warning or sympathizing using language that refers to negative experience does not make patients feel better and likely, will increase their discomfort. What the mind expects tends to be realized!
Conclusions: This research supports a) the need to educate, wherever practical, health care providers on the consequences of inappropriate communication to patients, and b) makes it fair to anticipate that preparing the patient/client with appropriate positive suggestions prior to and post surgery is likely to have a positive influence on their interpretation of this potentially painful and anxiety inducing experience.
Hope this is of interest to some of you,

