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Release Date: Aug. 12, 2003
HYPNOSIS DOESN’T IMPROVE
PAIN RELIEF STRATEGIES
By Becky Ham, Staff Writer Health Behavior News Service
Techniques like relaxation and visualizing a pleasant scene can take the
sting out of mild pain, but adding hypnosis to the mix does not make such
techniques more effective, according to a new report in Health Psychology.
Leonard S. Milling, Ph.D., of the University of Hartford and colleagues, compared
five different behavioral treatments for finger pain delivered under hypnotic
and non-hypnotic conditions.
Treatments included imagining a pain-protective glove, relaxing
various muscle groups, picturing a warm summer day and reciting statements
like: “I’ll
make the pain less severe when it comes.”
While all five treatments lessened the intensity of pain among participants,
the hypnotic versions were no better than their non-hypnotic counterparts in
reducing pain, even among participants who were highly sensitive to hypnotic
suggestions, say the researchers.
The amount of pain relief experienced by all participants, regardless of treatment,
was due in part to how much they expected to benefit from the therapy, according
to Milling.
Shorter treatments were also just as effective as longer ones, an encouraging
sign for their use in pain relief among patients who have a hard time concentrating
or who suffer through multiple painful tests and therapies, like burn victims
or cancer patients.
Milling and colleagues caution, however, that the study’s
results may be limited.
“Our results may generalize more readily to acute clinical pain that
is mild to moderate in intensity, like a finger stick, and less readily to
severe acute pain or to pain that is recurrent or chronic,” they say.
# # #
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Leonard Milling at (860)768-4546 or milling@mail.hartford.edu.
Health Psychology: Contact Arthur Stone, Ph.D., at (631) 632-8833.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
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