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The research
literature on Hypnosis is extensive. The endorsements of Hypnosis for its
healing effectiveness continue to mount. In a recent report, it was revealed
that a panel of the National Institutes of Health has endorsed the wider use of
Hypnosis for use in conjunction with conventional medical care.
Numerous clinical studies have been conducted
substantiating the effectiveness of the Hypnotic state in changing individuals'
lives. Some of these experimental studies have utilized poor controls for
supporting generalization of results beyond the specific experimental trial
reported. The research studies cited below are some of the thousands clinical
trials that HAVE utilized solid experimental technique and report reliable,
valid findings. These studies report a sample of the multitude of applications
of Hypnosis in human living:
MEDICAL APPLICATIONS
PAIN, MISCELLANEOUS:
1. Ernest
Hilgard (1977) and coworkers: in extensive investigations, using experimental
paradigms to induce pain (typically either a tourniquet cutting off the
circulation to a limb or plunging the limb into cold water), they have
demonstrated that various types of pain can be reduced by Hypnotically induced
analgesia.
In these
studies, 66% of the high susceptibility group, but only 13% of the lower and
17% of the medium susceptibility groups, were able to reduce their pain by 1/3
or more. Twenty-six percent of the high, 57% of the medium, and 31% of the low
susceptibility groups were able to reduce their pain by 10-32% when compared to
controls.
2.
Experimentally induced pain, while undeniably noxious, is different from the
experience of patients in the clinical setting. Whereas experimental pain is
brief, undergone voluntarily, and can be terminated at any time by the subject,
in the clinical setting, pain is often longterm, comes against the wishes of
the individual and is usually experienced as being outside of personal control.
Moreover, it is a part of a disease process that directly alters both physical
and mental functioning.
3. In a
neurochemical study of Hypnotic control of pain conducted by Domangue (1985),
patients suffering arthritic pain showed a correlation among levels of pain,
anxiety and depression. Anxiety and depression were inversely related to plasma
norepinephrine levels. Depression was correlated with dopamine levels and
negatively correlated with levels of serotonin and beta endorphin. Following
Hypnotherapy, there were clinically and statistically significant decreases in
depression, anxiety and pain, and increases in beta endorphin-like substances.
4. The
relationship between pain and endorphins is a complicated one. In his study,
Guerra (1982) found that only particular forms of the beta endorphins found in
peripheral blood during painful experience are associated with the Hypnotic
response.
5. Hilgard
(1982) studied children with cancer. He found Hypnosis to be effective in
reducing the pain and discomfort associated with repeated unpleasant medical
inventions.
6. Stam
(1986) reports that patients with chronic facial pain show a greater
responsiveness to suggestion as measured by the Carleton University
Responsiveness to Suggestion Scale (CURSS) than do normal controls. These
patients had higher Hypnotic susceptibility scores than did controls, showing a
high susceptibility score to be a good predictor of response to Hypnotic
treatment among such patients.
7. Domangue
(1985) conducted a study of 19 patients with a variety of musculoskeletal
disorders. He reported significant reductions of pain and dysphoria following
Hypnosis. The reductions were associated with significant increases in plasma
beta endorphin.
8. Barabasz
and Barabasz (1989) studied sample of 20 patients with a variety of chronic
pain syndromes. They utilized an Hypnotic technique known as Restricted
Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST). All of the patients were initially
rated as having low Hypnotic susceptibility on the Stanford Hypnotic
Susceptibility Scale (SHSS). Following exposure to the training technique, the
subjects demonstrated significant increases in both SHSS scores and in pain
reduction when compared to controls.

HEADACHE PAIN:
9. Evidence
accumulated to date suggests that a number of Hypnotherapeutic approaches are
highly effective in the treatment of patients with chronic migraine headaches.
Although no one Hypnotherapeutic technique has been demonstrated to be most
effective, all the methods appear to be superior to a standard treatment
relying on pharmacological approaches alone.
10. In a study conducted by Anderson (1975), migraine patients treated with
Hypnosis had a significant reduction in the number of attacks and in their
severity compared to a control group who were treated with traditional
medications. The difference did not become statistically significant until the
second six-month follow-up period. In addition, at the end of one year, the
number of patients in the Hypnosis group who had experienced no headaches for
over three months was significantly higher.
11. In a
controlled trial conducted by Olness (1987), self-Hypnosis was shown to be
significantly more effective than either propranolol or placebo in reducing the
frequency of migraine headaches in children between the ages of six and twelve
years of age.
12. In a
research conducted by Schlutter (1980), Hypnosis was also found to effective in
dealing with the relief of tension headache.
13. Alladin
(1988) reviewed the literature on Hypnosis, identifying fully a dozen different
Hypnotic techniques that have been used in the treatment of chronic migraine
headaches. Of these, Hypnotic training emphasizing relaxation, hand warming
(which, according to Anderson, 1975) seems the simplest method of establishing
increased voluntary control of the sensitive vasomotor system) and direct
Hypnotic suggestions of symptom removal have all been shown to be effective in
reducing the duration, intensity and frequency of migraine attacks during a
ten-week treatment course and at thirteen-month follow-up when compared to
controls.
14. A study
(Gutfeld, G. and Rao, L., 1992) was conducted on 42 patients suffering from
chronic headaches. These patients, all of whom had responded poorly to
conventional treatments, were split into two groups. One received Hypnotherapy
to relieve their daily headaches; the rest acted as a comparison group. The
Hypnotherapy group experienced reduced frequency and duration of headaches,
cutting the intensity by about 30%. "These results are impressive in such
a difficult, hard-to-treat group of patients," commented Egilius Spierings,
M.D., Ph.D. director of the headache section, division of neurology at Brigham
and Women's Hospital.

CANCER:
15. Speigel
and Bloom (1983b) reported that a study of women with metastatic breast cancer
showed that patients who received group therapy with training in Hypnosis over
a one-year period were able to reduce their pain experience by 50% when
compared to a control group.
16. In
addition, at a 10-year follow-up of these same women, the Hypnosis treatment
group had a mean survival rate of 36.6 months compared to 18.9 months for the
controls. This suggests that the intervention may be both important
quantitative and important qualitative effects (Spiegel 1989a).
17-18. Both
adolescent and adult cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy were reported by
Cotanch (1985) and by Zeltzer (1984), in separate research, to have fewer
symptoms of anticipatory nausea and vomiting following Hypnotic interventions.

CARDIOVASCULAR
CONDITIONS, GENERAL:
19. In
research by Bernardi (1982), hypertensive patients showed themselves to be significantly
more effective at controlling cardiovascular responses to stressors in Hypnosis
than they were in the normal waking state. This was particularly true for
subjects with more marked Hypnotic ability.
20. In a
study by Sletvold (1986), normotensive subjects were shown able to either
increase or decrease their blood pressure significantly with Hypnosis.
21. In a 1979
research study by Jackson, subjects with Hypnotic ability were shown to improve
their aerobic performance significantly in response to postHypnotic suggestion.
In addition, subjects with high Hypnotic susceptibility significantly improved
their performance in physical exercise using postHypnotic suggestion.
HYPERTENSION &
STRESS:
22. Kuttner
(1988) found that a Hypnotic approach emphasizing storytelling and imagery was
significantly more effective than behavioral techniques or standard medical
practice in alleviating distress during bone marrow aspirations in young
children with leukemia.
23. Hypertensive
subjects were found to have characteristic patterns of increased cerebral blood
flow that were most marked in the left hemisphere. During Hypnosis, they could
reduce cerebral blood flow more dramatically than could normotensive controls.
The changes noted in this research by Galeazzi (1982) were associated with
decreases in vascular resistance and diastolic blood pressure in the rest of
the body.
24-25.
Friedman and Taub (1977, 1978) reported the results of a trial comparing
Hypnosis with biofeedback or a combination of both in essential hypertension.
At the end of four weeks of treatment, all groups showed a significant
reduction in blood pressure. But at six-month follow-up only the patients
receiving Hypnosis had maintained the reduction.
26-27.
Generally speaking, literature review supports the value of Hypnosis in
analgesia and stress reduction in a number of disorders, whether following the
dissociative formulation (Miller, 1986) or a social psychology approach
(Noland, 1987).
RESPIRATORY
CONDITIONS:
28-29. In
studies by Maher-Loughnan (1962, 1970), Hypnosis was shown to alleviate the
subjective distress of patients with asthma. This change was measured either by
the number of attacks or the amount of medication that was needed when compared
to supportive therapy.
30. In
further study by Maher-Loughnan (1970) asthmatic subjects were randomly
assigned to either Hypnosis or relaxation therapy. The results showed both
treatment modalities of benefit to the patients, but the improvement in the
Hypnotherapy group was significantly greater. There was a peak of improvement
between the seventh and twelfth weeks of treatment. In addition, only the
Hypnotic subjects showed improvement in physiologic measures of respiration
(forced expiratory volume).
31. Ewer and
Stewart (1986) reported a randomized control trial of Hypnosis in patients with
moderate asthma. Patients with a high Hypnotic susceptibility showed a 74.9%
improvement in bronchial hyper-responsiveness (to methacholine challenge), a 5.5%
increase in peak expiratory flow rate, a 26.2% decrease in the use of
bronchodilator and a 41% improvement in daily ratings outside of the clinic.
Twelve patients with a high Hypnotic susceptibility score showed a 75%
improvement. However, a control group of 17 patients and a second group of 10
patients with a low level of Hypnotic susceptibility showed no change in either
objective or subjective measures.
32. A study
by Olness (1985) showed that children trained in self-Hypnosis could
significantly alter their tissue levels of oxygen as measured by transcutaneous
PO2 measures.

STRENGTHENING THE
IMMUNE SYSTEM:
33.
Hypnosis strengthens the disease-fighting capacity of two types of immune
cells, reports Patricia Ruzyla-Smith and her co-workers at Washington State
University in Pullman. Thirty-three college students who achieved a Hypnotic
trance easily and 32 students who had great difficulty doing so were recruited
for the study. Students who underwent Hypnosis displayed larger jumps in two
important classes of white blood cells than participants who received
relaxation or no method. The greatest immune enhancement occurred among highly
Hypnotizable students in the Hypnosis group.
INTESTINAL CONDITIONS:
34-35.
Whorwell (1984) reported successful treatment of Irritable Bowel Syndrome using
Hypnosis in a controlled study of a group of patients who had a severe chronic
form of the disorder and had not responded to conventional therapies. Patients
were randomly allocated to either psychotherapy or Hypnotherapy groups. The
psychotherapy patients showed a significant improvement in measures of pain,
distension and in general well-being despite a lack of change in bowel habit.
In contrast, the Hypnotherapy patients showed a dramatic improvement in all
measures which persisted at a two-year follow-up. (Whorwell, 1987).
Hypnotherapy, including suggestions for improved gastrointestinal function and
pain reduction, was significantly better than Hypnosis for simple deep muscle
relaxation.
36. Harvey
(1989) reported a similar improvement following Hypnotherapy in 20 of the 33
patients with refractory Irritable Bowel Syndrome at three-month follow-up.
37. Colgan
(1988) reported a randomized trial of 30 patients with frequently relapsing
duodenal ulcer disease. The subjects were treated for ten weeks with either
Hypnotherapy or ranitidine or the drug alone. At a twelve-month follow-up, all
of the drug-only patients, but only half of the drug-plus-Hypnotherapy
patients, had relapsed.

HEMOPHELIA:
38.
Swirsky-Saccetti (1986) reported on research with hemophiliacs. Over an
eighteen-week follow-up, a group of hemophiliac patients who were taught
self-Hypnosis significantly reduced both their level of self-reported distress
and the amount of the factor concentrate they required to control bleeding when
compared with a control group of patients who did not undergo Hypnosis.
39. A
30-month follow-up by LaBaw (1975) with hemophiliac patients demonstrated the
effectiveness of group procedures for self-Hypnosis in reducing distress and
the amount of blood products required when compared to control groups in
patients ranging from five to forty-eight years of age.
SURGERY:
40. Patients
undergoing head and neck surgery who were trained with preoperative Hypnosis
had significantly shorter postoperative hospitalizations than did matched
controls (Rapkin, 1988).
41. Swedish
researchers studied 50 women prior to surgery. Twenty-five of the women were
assigned to the experimental group who were briefly Hypnotized each day for
several days before their scheduled operations. Twenty-five were assigned to a
control groups who were not Hypnotized. While in a Hypnotic state, the women in
the experimental group heard suggestions to relax and feel hungry. After
surgery only 10 had nausea (15 experienced no nausea), compared to 17 in the
no-Hypnosis control group (8 experienced no nausea).
CHILDBIRTH:
42. In 1963,
Schwartz reported on a study in which Hypnotherapy was used successfully to
prolong pregnancy and prevent premature delivery.
43-45. Omer
(1986a, 1986b, 1987a) found that frequency of physical complaints and the
general level of anxiety were correlated with premature labor and premature
contractions. A brief technique emphasizing the use of self-Hypnosis was
employed as an adjunct to pharmacological treatment. The prolongation of
pregnancy was significantly higher for this group than for the medication-along
control group, and infant weight was also significantly greater.
MISCELLANEOUS
CONDITIONS:
46. In a
careful single-case controlled study of a patient with Raynaud's disease, Conn
(1984) showed a rapid and dramatic vasodilatation in response to Hypnotic
suggestion.
47. In
research reported by Spanos (1988), a pair of randomized, carefully designed
studies were conducted with a group of people who had warts. Subjects who were
given Hypnotic or nonHypnotic suggestions were significantly more likely to
achieve wart regression than placebo or no-treatment groups.
48-49. In a
report by David Spiegel in the Harvard Mental Health Letter, the following
research was cited: a) Several controlled experiments have shown that Hypnosis
can be effectively used to eliminate warts; and b) Studies have been done on
persons suffering from pseudoseizures, in which they lose consciousness or
motor control and make jerking movements typical of epilepsy (but without the
associated brain damage). Such patients have been taught to limit or eliminate
these symptoms by using Hypnosis.

PSYCHOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
ANXIETY:
50. In a
report by David Spiegel in the Harvard Mental Health Letter, the research was
cited that Hypnosis methods have been used successfully for anxiety associated
with medical procedures.
51. Two
hundred forty-one patients who were undergoing percutaneous vascular and renal
procedures were randomly tested on three testing regimens, one of which was
Hypnosis. Patients rated their pain and anxiety on 1-10 scales before, every 15
minutes during, and after the procedures. Pain remained flat over the duration
of procedure time in the Hypnosis group; pain increased linearly with procedure
time in both other groups. Anxiety decreased over time in all three groups; the
sharpest decrease was in the group that was hypnotized. Procedure times were
significantly shorter in the Hypnosis group. In addition, Hypnosis showed
itself to be superior in improving hemodynamic stability.
PHOBIC REACTIONS:
52. In a
report by David Spiegel in the Harvard Mental Health Letter, the following
research was cited: One seven-year study showed that 50% of patients afraid of
flying were improved of cured after Hypnosis treatment for a fear of flying.
DEPRESSION:
53. In a
neurochemical study of Hypnotic control of pain conducted by Domangue (1985),
patients suffering arthritic pain showed a correlation among levels of pain,
anxiety and depression. Anxiety and depression were inversely related to plasma
norepinephrine levels. Depression was correlated with dopamine levels and
negatively correlated with levels of serotonin and beta endorphin. Following
Hypnotherapy, there were clinically and statistically significant decreases in
depression, anxiety and pain, and increases in beta endorphin-like substances.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
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