breast cancer and hypnosis

I have recently received an email from Anne Spencer from the infinity institute bout the uses of hypnosis in cancer and surgery… a very interesting thing to allow the mind to take you on a holiday whilst the body is healing itself.

I apologise for the direct copy but it seems the best way to let you know about this…

Begin…

The following was submitted to us by Christina Gikas and we are pleased to share it with you today.

ABC News

Hypnosis Reduces Breast Surgery Side Effects

Pain, Nausea and Other Side Effects Mitigated by Pre-Surgery Sessions, Study Shows

By SUSAN KANSAGRA, M.D., ABC News Medical Unit

Aug. 28, 2007 -

It’s something that’s usually associated with stage performances and helping smokers quit, but new research suggests hypnosis may soon be an important tool in helping patients endure common side effects of breast cancer surgery.

 

Researchers at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York showed that a 15-minute hypnosis session reduced side effects including pain, nausea and emotional distress in patients undergoing breast cancer operations.

The study was published Tuesday in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

“If this were a drug, it would be very successful,” said lead study author Guy Montgomery, director of the Integrative Behavioral Medicine Program at Mount. Sinai School of Medicine.

Montgomery added that hypnosis carries the added benefit of having no side effectsa quality that makes it an attractive alternative to many drugs used for similar purposes.

Two hundred women who were about to undergo surgeries like a breast biopsy or removal of a suspicious breast lump participated in the study. About half of the women received a 15-minute hypnosis session shortly before their operations. The other women in the study had a consultation with a psychologist before surgery.

The hypnosis session included relaxation exercises that encouraged the women to think of pleasant thoughts, such as a beach on warm day. The women who did not undergo hypnosis talked to a psychologist, who listened and offered supportive comments only.

After their surgeries, the women who had hypnosis experienced less pain, nausea, fatigue, discomfort and emotional upset than their counterpartsand these differences were substantial, the study’s authors reported.

 

Not only did hypnosis reduce the side effects from surgery, but it also did this while reducing the amount of anesthesia used during the surgery. Additionally, the researchers showed that hypnosis decreased the amount of time spent in the operating room by almost 11 minutes, leading to an overall cost savings of about $770 per patient.

These results were seen despite the fact that treatments involving hypnotism don’t work for everyone; previous studies have shown that about 11 percent of people are resistant to hypnosis. But researchers noted that the tests used to weed out hypnosis-resistant women from the study would have taken longer to perform than the hypnosis itself.

Believing in Good Results

 

Hypnosis is believed to work by helping patients expect good results. It also helps take attention away from pain, and some studies have even shown that hypnosis can actually change the way a patient perceives pain.

“When we take an aspirin & we expect to have headache relief,” Montgomery said. “One of the things hypnosis is very good at is helping people form expectancy to these outcomes, such as less pain and less nausea.”

While hypnosis is commonly associated with a loss of control, many doctors say it is a powerful tool that patients can use to take charge of their own health.

 

C. Richard Chapman, professor and director of the Pain Research Center at the University of Utah said, “This study adds to a growing body of evidence showing that psychological interventions complement medical interventions. & Such interventions empower patients by engaging them in their own care and giving them control over their own pain, nausea and discomfort.”

Montgomery said that even patients who are skeptical about or fearful of hypnosis can take advantage of its benefits if they are properly counseled.

“We’re going to tell you that hypnosis is typically not like hypnosis used in television or seen in movies,” he said. “Rather, its something that we can do together that can help you reduce side effects. & You’re really the person in control.”

Adding to this notion is the fact that the hypnosis sessions the women underwent included instruction on how they could perform hypnosis on themselves in the future.

 

Not Just for Breast Cancer Surgery

In addition to being effective, hypnosis may also prove to be a versatile tool. The benefits of hypnosis have been shown in previous research to extend to other procedures as well, including gynecological surgery and coronary artery bypass.

Montgomery said he is hopeful that doctors continue to expand the use of hypnosis in other medical applications.

 

“This could become part of standard care,” he said. However, he added, “it’s not a panacea for everything, but rather a tool in the toolbox that we can use to address specific problems.”

 

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

Carpe Diem…

Anne H. Spencer, PhD

Founder, Exec Director

www.infinityinst.com ~ 27 Years Teaching the Power of the Mind ~

END.

Thisamazing, the healing power of the mind can really kick it up a notch when you realise exactly how to get there.

Be well, hug those you love

Mel

Hypnosis an Pregnancy

It is always fun to have a pregnant client, they are just so lovely, the first time mums just do not know how to feel and so they are feeling all over the place about everything.

Second time mums are so much more relaxed… they just want the pregnency over with so that they can get on with the busy things that they do from day to day.

It had been said many years ago that pregnant women should avoid tragedy or seeing something disturbing, this actually follows now because a study has shown that cortisol which is the fight, flight or fright hormone  courses through the body and the babies as well, this has an interesting effect on the growing mind, the study indicates that babies who have had distressed mothers aremore likely to have psych problems when they are older… WOW

Here is the link

http://www.postgradandbeyond.mq.edu.au/enewsletter/05-humanities/issue_18_stories/story3.htm

… and his autoimmune system is now attacking itself

I know of a couple who have split up for two years now and the guy has been dragging his feet with settlement, so much so that he is now in contempt of court.. it means more to him to piss off his ex than to just get it over with.

Sadly, they have a child and the many issues that go along with that.

(back story)

for the last 5 years, he has been predicting his own death, this is one of the reasons that his wife left him because he took her on his roller coaster of emotions every day and she could not cope any more and left him.  He is morbidly obese and though in the last 2 years shed 75kg+ he is still a big boy.

Last week, I have been told that he was due in court in three weeks time and he  will not do anything about it, the guy is a friend so all I can do is be there if he needs to chat.

On Monday I find out that he is now in hospital in ICU on a respirator with secondary pneumonia and his own immune system is attacking his lungs , he had been coughing up blood…. talk about a parts conflict.

For as long as I have known them, he has been generally unhappy, and from what his ex wife says, he was always saying he was going to die around his birthday, this has been going on for years because she would call me crying from time to time and say she could not help him want to live, he did not want to get off the couch and look at alternatives, he just kept saying that he would die and it would be soon….   he turns 35 in may

Simply put,  be careful what you say because the subconscious mind is always aware and gives you exactly what you want, given that once she had left him he then went out and shed so much weight, if he turned his thinking to I want to live.. then perhaps this would have been different, he still can pull through, he just needs to want it enough, however in his language now saying “I don’t want to die” Still carries the command ‘to die’, the subconscious can (and does depending on the depth of importance) ignore the ‘don’t’.

Think for a positive outcome and say it 10 times in the morning and 10 times at night

Emile coue coined the phrase

“every day and in every way I am becoming better and better and better”

I give this to my clients to say and because it is open ended for the better, then the subconscious takes this on easily and naturally and changes things in just the right time for you.

Be well

Mel

Childbirth and Hypnosis

Many words have been written on Hypnosis in childbirth, I have had a sisterinlaw say that all she really wanted was the drugs and she was horrified that people choose to have natural births with hypnosis.

I wonder just how scared she is about her own body and what it is capable of? What do people get out of telling the scary 22 hour labour stories? well, they get to tell everyone how hard they had it, they get comfort and pity even 20-30+ years later and they get to tell pregnant mothers that labour is not easy… well that depends on your point of view.

The Painrelief from hypnosis is incredible, I have seen clients just comfortably feel a muscle tightening and then letting go for a while and know that they are progressing with every one, feeling them selves opening in the right way for them to release the baby has been a fantastic experience and is beautiful to behold!

I have been a birth attendant in 3 labours now and it is amazing the difference that attitude can make, while we all filter for different things it is never more obvious than in times of heightened emotion, the frightened women in labour and the frightened husbands feeling like they are useless is a thing of the past when you are with a doula.

There is something so calming about a woman who has done it and can guide you through, this was the way it used to be, women would get together and celebrate with each contraction the coming of the baby(ies) and now it is hospitals (a necessary thing, if something does go wrong) Birthing Centres are fantastic and I cannot talk about them enough, being allowed to be you and knowing what you may feel is always more important than having a doctor (someone you see when you are sick) “deliver” the baby takes all the responsibility from the mother and while some people want that, is it a good thing to instill a feeling of not being able to cope from birth?
A thing to think about, what do you think?
Mel