Archive for the ‘Hypnotherapy’ Category

Self-Hypnosis for Labour Highly Effective

Sunday, October 7th, 2007

An article in The Independent (30th Jan 2007) reports:

Research at the Women’s and Children’s Hospital in Adelaide, where hypnosis is used for women in labour, shows it is highly effective. Women who had the therapy, which was given after 37 weeks gestation, used fewer epidurals - 36 per cent compared with 53 per cent in other women. A second study showed that women taught self-hypnosis reduced their need for analgesia by half, epidurals by 70 per cent, and were more than twice as likely to be satisfied with their pain management in labour compared with other women.

Hypnotherapy helps IBS

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

A new report from the department of gastroenterology at King’s College Hospital, London, published in the British Medical Journal, highlights the fact that Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a combination of “psychological” as well as physical factors, and that psychological therapies, including hypnotherapy, can be an alternative to medication.

Excerpt from the Daily Mail:

Hypnotherapy could be the latest weapon in the fight against irritable bowel syndrome, providing benefits that last up to five years.

Conventional treatment – including antidepressant and painkilling drugs – is ineffective, according to a report which says doctors should consider offering psychological therapies.

The report says the condition may have a partial “psychological basis”. 

Small trials have found hypnotherapy was successful as a means of managing symptoms, says a report published today in the British Medical Journal.

It found patients with IBS are more likely to suffer from depression and “abnormal” behaviour patterns including anxiety.

They also display somatisation – the conversion of emotional, mental, or psychosocial problems into physical complaints.

Excerpt from BBC News:

Hypnotherapy could help people with severe irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), researchers say.

Doctors should consider using this and other “psychological” treatments such as antidepressants to help sufferers, King’s College London experts say in the British Medical Journal.

However, a shortage of therapists could hinder this, they add.

Experts said there was growing evidence that IBS cases have psychological as well as biological elements. 

Dr Nick Read, a psychologist and adviser to the IBS Network, said he felt that the majority of IBS patients had a psychologists element to their condition.

He said: “There’s now a lot of evidence that psychological therapies can be effective, but a lot of doctors remain sceptical, and carry on treating with drugs which have side-effects, and which basically don’t work.

“I work with patients with IBS trying to understand what, for each patient, lies behind the illness.”

Ahhh it’s all getting very technical now….

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Just a quick hello to say - I haven’t a clue what I’m doing… I’ve never blogged in my life… all this business of setting up websites and having a blog - well… I haven’t a clue!

I will be posting my musings - about life… perceptions… realities… advances and breakthroughs in therapies - the mind body connection… the biology of belief… creating the reality you want… and meaningful coincidences… just to name a few!

I wanted to make the content on my site rich and compelling… this remains to be seen! Bear with me as I add content - I hope you find it interesting and insightful…

It may take me awhile to harnass the potential of this… this… tool… but I will get there - I hope you come and join me for the ride… It should be at the very least an amusing adventure.