Mind-body medicine typically focuses on strategies such as relaxation, hypnosis, visual imagery, meditation, yoga, biofeedback, tai chi, qi gong, cognitive-behavioral therapies, group support, autogenic training, and spirituality.
Mind-body as a concept is not new. It has been used as an integral part of the treatment of illness of Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine, dating back more than 2,000 years. It was also noted that Hippocrates used such techniques around 400 B.C.E. However, even though mind-body concepts were prevalent in the East, developments in the Western world by the 16th and 17th century led to a separation of human spiritual and emotional dimensions from the physical body. During the Renaissance and Enlightenment eras, this led to a redirection of science. As a result, the belief was that as a race we could master (rather than work with) nature. Technological advances (e.g., microscopy, the stethoscope, the blood pressure cuff, and refined surgical techniques) demonstrated a cellular world that seemed far apart from the world of belief and emotion. The discovery of bacteria and later, antibiotics further dispelled the notion of belief influencing health.
During the last century scientists began realizing that the mind-body connection was much more than just beliefs and emotion. In the 1920s, Walter Cannon's work revealed the direct relationship between stress and neuroendocrine responses in animals. Coining the phrase "fight or flight", Cannon describes the primitive reflexes of the sympathetic and adrenal activation in response to perceived danger and other environmental pressures. Hans Selye further defined the deleterious effects of stress and distress on health. At the same time, technological advances in medicine that could identify specific pathological changes, and new discoveries in pharmaceuticals, were occurring at a very rapid pace. The disease-based model, the search for a specific pathology, and the identification of external cures were paramount, even in psychiatry.
Since the 1960's, mind-body interactions have become an extensively researched field. The evidence for benefits for certain indications from biofeedback, cognitive-behavioral interventions, and hypnosis is quite good. There is emerging evidence regarding their physiological effects.
Evidence from randomized controlled trials and, in many cases, systematic reviews of the literature, suggest that:
Posted: 10/01/2006
This article provided by The International Hypnosis Research Institute.
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