has the disease and not merely the disease that the patient has.
Modern behavioral psychology demonstrates that learning by reward and punishment, or conditioning of the unconscious mind, may produce illness. This has
supported a mechanistic view of human beings, even when mental influences on physical illness is accepted. Further fragmentation of the whole self has come with
the explosion of medical knowledge and specialization. No single physician today can understand all there is to know about the body. A patient, therefore, has to
parcel out his or her body among various specialists. Specializations in our hospitals have added to compartmentalization of mind and body.
Modern Health Care
Many factors mitigate against the acceptance of spiritual healing as a legitimate therapy. Drug therapy is a major industry throughout the world. Private health care is
another major industry that resists competition. Governments are forced by budgetary considerations to limit health care to the bare essentials of physical treatments,
leaving health care professionals without time to attend to other aspects of the patient's needs.
Medical education, with its long hours and emphasis on learning volumes of information, may be teaching young physicians to neglect the more personal and spiritual
side of healing. Fortunately, more medical schools are developing programs to help students develop these aspects of themselves and relate them to patient care
(
22
).
PROVIDER–CLIENT INTERACTIONS
The Role of Diagnosis in Spiritual Healing
Many spiritual healers will ask about the healee's symptoms and medical diagnosis, if this is known. Some healers feel that they must adjust
the biological energies of
the healee according to their intuitively perceived assessments of the initial state of these energies. Healers of many other traditions do not require detailed
information for diagnosis. They simply make themselves available as channels for energy, turning over the management of the problem to a higher power (e.g., the
intuitive awareness of the healee and/or healer, God, Christ, spirit guides, guardian angels).
Healers may perceive part of the diagnostic picture but not all of it. For example, in tests of intuitive diagnosis, healers simultaneously observed a series of individuals
with known diagnoses. Each drew a picture and wrote down his or her diagnostic impressions of what was observed in the auras. Then each, in turn, reported to the
person observed what his or her impressions were. No one was more surprised than the healers when each of the reports was significantly different from the others'
reports. The next surprise was when the people who had been given the intuitive diagnostic impressions indicated that they agreed with all but one of the “readings.”
All but one of the healers resonated accurately with a different facet of the problems of the people they were observing. (One healer clearly was projecting her
impressions, reporting she sensed depression in most of the people she observed.) Before these studies, most of the healers had believed that they were perceiving
the whole problem when they were giving intuitive diagnostic readings (
23
).
Among those healers who focus on diagnosis, a pendulum or other such device may be used to help them bring intuitive information into awareness. It is generally
assumed that these devices are activated by the unconscious mind of the healer, through subtle muscular movements (
24
,
25
and
26
). Clinical progress in treatment
is assessed by healee subjective reports, by objective evidence of change, and by serial intuitive diagnostic impressions.
Types of Healing
L
AYING ON OF
H
ANDS
A laying-on-of-hands healing may last 5 to 30 minutes or longer. In my experience and that of others, healees usually relax and may even doze or enter deep altered
states of consciousness during healings. Beneficial responses to healing may be felt immediately, especially with relief of anxiety, tension, and pain. Pain may
increase briefly over the first few treatments and is often interpreted as a positive sign, apparently indicating that shifts are occurring in the processes underlying the
pain; with additional treatments, a decrease in the original pain is expected. Chronic conditions may require repeated treatments, usually
given at weekly intervals
over several months.
D
ISTANT
H
EALING
Distant healing may be done by one or more healers who focus on the name of the person in need of healing. The distance between healer and healee is thought to
be immaterial to the success of treatment; successes have been reported when healers are many miles away from their healees. There is a general belief that a group
sending absent healing may be more effective than a single healer. Many healers find that the rapport established through telephone contact, a photograph, or even
just a name and a summary of the problem facilitate absent healing, whereas other healers find that unconditionally accepting detachment rather than personal
rapport works better and suffice with only a name for contact.
THERAPY AND OUTCOMES
Responses to Healing
Healing efficacy is unpredictable. Acute conditions, such as headaches, trauma, and infections, may respond within minutes or hours. Chronic conditions may require
weekly treatments over a period of months to obtain maximum benefits. If positive effects are going to occur, one often has some indication of improvement in the first
three to six sessions. A lack of effects with one healer is no indication thabenefits will not be obtained with another healer. Subjective improvements are more frequent
than objective ones (
27
). The physical disease may be unchanged, but a person's attitude may shift so that he or she lives more comfortably with his or her disabilities
or seeks the meaning of the illness.
Emotional conditions, such as anxiety and depression, often respond well to healing. Poor mental attitudes, impaired self-image, long-harbored resentments and the
like may improve dramatically with healing. Relationships also may improve with healing. This might be the result of healing directed to the involved parties or of
healing directed to only one of them. Many healers believe that our world is more intimately linked through nonlocal awareness than is generally appreciated (
28
).
Spiritual awareness may be awakened during healings, bringing people in contact with a vast source of inspiration that can help them deal with their dis-eases and
diseases (
29
,
30
and
31
). Many healers feel that awakening of spiritual awareness is the most important aspect of healing and that the
body is a vehicle for the
expression of the needs of spirit and soul. They feel that the soul chooses to be born into a particular family to learn lessons in relating with love and forgiveness to
others with whom it may have had difficult relationships in previous lifetimes (
32
,
33
,
34
and
35
).
Healing into death is a major contribution of healers to conventional medical practice (
36
). Conventional medicine tends to fight death and prolong life at all costs,
sometime without regard for the quality of life. Spiritual healing views a peaceful death as a good healing and finds that healing often eases the transition between
worlds. Survival of the spirit after physical death is assumed by many healers who claim that they channel spirits who contribute to their healing (
37
,
38
). This type of
guidance may come from the spirit guides of the healer or from spirits related to the healee.
MAJOR MODALITIES AND INDICATIONS
There are few studies on spiritual healing published in major medical journals, although over 175 controlled studies of healing have been conducted (
1
). The majority
of these studies are published in peer-reviewed parapsychology journals. Approximately twelve of them are doctoral and master's degree dissertations. They include
studies of humans, animals, plants, bacteria, yeasts, cells in laboratory culture, enzymes, and models. The following are some examples of healing studies.
Distant Healing
Distant healing is an excellent therapy for controlled, double-blind studies because it can be given with absolutely no physical or social contact between healers and
healees. This factor makes it easy to maintain a blind study because no one but the experimenter assigning the patients for distant healing and the healers sending
the healing will know which patients are being given the treatment.
Randolph C. Byrd, MD, studied the effects of intercessory prayer healing on patients hospitalized in a coronary care unit (CCU) (
39
). In a prospective, double-blind,
randomized study, 192 patients were sent distant healing and 201 patients served as controls. There were no significant differences between groups on admission in
degree of severity of myocardial infarction or in numerous other pertinent variables.
“Intercessors” were born-again Christians who prayed daily and were active with their local church. Each CCU patient had 3 to 7 intercessors praying for him or her.
Intercessors were given patients' first names, their diagnoses, and updates on their condition. “[E]ach intercessor was asked to pray daily for a rapid recovery and for
prevention of complications and death, in addition to other areas of prayer they believed to be beneficial to the patient.” Significantly fewer patients in the prayer group
required intubation/ventilation (p < .002) or antibiotics (p < .005), had cardiopulmonary arrests (p < .02), developed pneumonia (p < .03), or required diuretics (p <
.05). A multivariate analysis showed a very highly significant difference between the groups (p < .0001). Despite these differences between groups, the mean times in
CCU and durations of hospitalization between groups were nearly identical. Healing appeared to reduce the severity of cardiac pathology but not shorten duration of
hospitalization. This exceptionally good study is an exception in yet another way: it was published in the
Southern Medical Journal.
Therapeutic Touch
Healing by the laying on of hands has been standardized into a treatment system called therapeutic touch by Dolores Krieger, PhD, RN, professor of nursing at New
York
University, and Dora Kunz, a gifted clairvoyant and healer. It is conservatively estimated that 40,000 nurses in America practice therapeutic touch. More than 90
nursing schools offer courses in therapeutic touch.
Therapeutic touch is given either with the hands lightly touching the body or as noncontact therapeutic touch, with the hands a few inches away from the body.
Healers
center their minds, focusing on the intent to help and heal while excluding other thoughts from their minds. The term
centering comes from the potter's wheel:
if the clay is in the center of the wheel, it stays there. If it is off center, centrifugal force sends it flying in all directions.
Healing and the Immune System
Healers have proposed that enhancing immune system functions (and thus strengthening the body) is one way in which healing works. Anxiety and stress bring about
changes in the immune system. Changes in circulating immune proteins, such as immunoglobulins (Ig) and lymphocytes, may thus provide measures of physiological
stress responses, as in the following study.
Melodie Olson and colleagues anticipated that students who were to take their professional board examinations would be highly stressed and would show changes in
their immune systems which could be influenced by therapeutic touch (
40
,
41
).
Immune system values measured after therapeutic touch treatment on the day before the exams showed significant differences for IgA and IgM (p < .05) and for a
T-lymphocyte function (apoptosis, p < .05).
1
Experimental and control groups showed comparable levels of stress at the start of the study.
The authors note that confounding factors may have included nutritional changes, especially because dietary intake may have been altered before the exams, and the
presence of a caring person for the experimental group that was not counterbalanced for the control group.
Pain Relief
Healers and healees report that pain is the symptom most responsive to spiritual healing. Several studies of therapeutic touch reported immediate reductions in pain
from tension headaches and surgery (
42
,
43
,
44
,
45
and
46
). The following study showed effects that were of longer duration: Robin Redner et al. studied effects of a
method of healing which was developed by Johnston (
47
). This healing method
“... begins with the treater's assessment of the bioenergy field around the patient's physical body. Using their hands, the treater senses only imbalances,
(which may evidence as heat, a dense quality, or a sense of blockage), and treats the imbalance by visualizing the energy becoming balanced and free
flowing. This visualization continues until the treater senses a change towards balance or the free flow of energy in that area.
... Johnston's technique occurs entirely off the body in the patient's energy field....”
Johnston's healer training includes a series of three courses. Treaters in the study had completed two or more courses and participated in weekly practice sessions
for 2 years. The study introduced an
attention placebo control group, which is intended to control for expectancy effects and for relaxation effects that occur when one
receives attention from a caring person. The study also provided 30-minute interventions by two healers for four
treatments during the study; compared bioenergy
diagnoses with medical diagnoses; studied positive and negative moods as well as levels of anxiety; and checked outcome measures 1 week following healing.
Participants suffered from arthritis, headaches, and low back pain, and they could not have been taking narcotic medications or been receiving massage, physical
therapy, acupuncture, or acupressure during the study. The 47 participants were randomly assigned to experimental or control groups, being told only that there were
two intervention possibilities, but remaining blind regarding assignment. This study demonstrated significantly reduced severity of affective and sensory aspects of
pain 1 week after the healing intervention on the McGill-Melzack Pain Questionnaire (each at p < .05) [F(1,45) = 5.88]. The persistence of pain reduction 1 week after
healing is a significant finding over previous research on healing for pain.
On the weekly Profile of Mood Scale (POMS), the high-intensity treatment group showed increased anxiety over time, whereas the low-intensity placebo group
showed less anxiety (p < .05) [F(1,45) = 4.77]. The lack of findings on the physical measurements and bioenergy evaluation may have been due to small numbers in
each of the target problem categories.
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