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The use of hypnotism to treat medical problems is increasing, but
how it works still baffles scientists. Sally Appleton reports for
the Daily Telegraph... (September 2004)
Some
doctors use it to treat insomnia, asthma and eczema. Others to calm
migraines and irritable bowels, and to reduce anxiety. Yet, even
though the use of hypnosis is on the increase across the medical
profession, no one understands how it works. Some experts even believe
the "trance" induced by hypnosis can happen to us all when we are
daydreaming, engrossed in a bestseller or commuting to work. Mind
games: health professionals are being trained to use hypnosis, which
can help in the treatment of problems such as insomnia and migraines
The ways that doctors are willing to use hypnosis are expanding
in number and range. Some use it to relieve the chronic pain of
arthritis, the acute pain of dental surgery, reduce the side effects
of cancer treatments and help people stop smoking or lose weight.
It is even used to make food taste better for cancer patients whose
taste buds have been damaged by radiotherapy.
Hypnosis is now one of the most commonly used complementary therapies,
with an estimated 353,000 consumers every year in England. To meet
this demand, more and more health professionals are being trained
in its use. General practices in 12 per cent of primary care groups
in England offer hypnosis to patients. This results in nearly one-and-a-half
million private and NHS appointments with hypnotherapists every
year, at a cost to private users of £34 million and to the NHS of
more than £5 million.
Despite this increase in medical use and a boom in hypnosis research,
experts still don't agree how it works and such understanding could
make it even more effective. Scientists at the British Association's
Festival of Science in Exeter will continue the long-running debate
on the subject tomorrow.
Hypnosis attempts to direct a person's thoughts, feelings and behaviour
by "suggestions" that instruct him or her to concentrate on particular
images or ideas. This can be achieved with the help of a hypnotist
or through self-hypnosis. For example, a "suggestion" to reduce
the pain of having a tooth extracted might invoke an image of pain
being controlled like the volume on a television set. So if the
dial is turned down, the pain can be reduced. Likewise, the image
of lying on a beach in the sun can help some people to experience
less pain.
People usually need a series of hypnosis sessions, starting with
a "hypnotic induction", which increases relaxation and allows people
to become absorbed in their inner thoughts. During hypnosis, subjects
are usually aware of their environment, can remember most of what
happens and cannot be made to do things against their will.
Scientists agree that there is a pattern or "orchestra" of brain
activity during hypnosis that some refer to as a trance. A trance
can be described as a state of mind in which a person's attention
is focused, he or she is absorbed in a specific activity and is
switched off from what is going on around them. This brain activity
depends on the type of "suggestion" that the patient is given and
can occur in a number of parts of the brain, including the cortex
that controls the "higher" brain functions such as perception, sensation,
thought and memory and the lower parts that control unconscious
processes such as breathing, heart rate and muscle movement. One
view suggests that the brain achieves an altered state of consciousness,
a unique trance, during hypnosis.
Prof Helen Crawford, of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University in Blacksburg, Virginia, an expert in the neurophysiology
of pain relief through hypnosis, says she has concrete physiological
evidence to show that the brain achieves a state of focused attention
during hypnosis. She says there is something "dramatically different"
about the brain activity in people during hypnosis, for pain relief,
compared with when they are not hypnotised. She describes a change
in the pattern of brain activity during hypnosis, characterised
by a significant increase in theta waves of about 5-7Hz recorded
by electroencephalograph (EEG) monitors. However, support among
experts for an alternative explanation appears to be growing. Although
proponents of this rival theory do not dispute that research has
reliably shown physiological changes in the brain during hypnosis,
they do not believe these changes are confined to hypnosis. They
propose that the pattern of brain activity seen during hypnosis
can be found during everyday experiences when attention is focused:
for example, being absorbed in a piece of music or driving a long
distance. This explanation makes the brain activity seen during
hypnosis seem less special, since it suggests this can happen to
us all.
One of the authors of a British Psychological Society report on
hypnosis, Dr Graham Wagstaff of the University of Liverpool, believes
the physiological evidence cited by some scientists to support the
idea that the brain is in a unique "trance" during hypnosis has
been over-interpreted. "If you give anybody an instruction, you
will get physiological changes in the brain," he says. "To establish
that hypnosis invokes a special physiological state of the brain,
you have to show that the person is not capable of doing that when
not hypnotised." He says current research methods are typically
not able to answer that question, despite the conclusions of the
scientists involved, because they do not enable us to separate the
effect on the brain of the "suggestion" itself from being in a hypnotic
state of mind. "I have yet to come across an experiment where they
look for physiological differences between a group of people who
are given a suggestion under hypnosis, and a different group of
people, who share similar psychological characteristics, but who
receive exactly the same suggestion without hypnosis."
One reason for this lack of good controlled research, he says, is
that scientists searching for the physiological basis of hypnosis
are usually trying to show that it is something special. They might
not be as successful at securing funding for this expensive and
time-consuming work if the aim was to show that there was nothing
unique about brain activity during hypnosis. "There are question
marks," acknowledges another author of the report, Dr Michael Heap
of Wathwood Hospital, Rotherham, who has frequently used hypnosis
to treat psychological conditions. Dr Heap says the traditional
idea that you are in some special state of consciousness, a unique
trance, during all forms of hypnosis is very unlikely. He disagrees
that there is a "biological marker" to show that brain activity
during hypnosis is "uniquely hypnotic". We may not know how it works,
but it certainly seems to.
Phyllis Alden, of Derbyshire Royal Infirmary, is a clinical psychologist
who has used hypnosis to treat patients for the past 20 years. She
says hypnosis can be so effective in reducing pain that patients
can even stop using conventional painkillers. She believes the hypnotic
state is simply capitalising on our natural capacity to focus our
attention. "Hypnosis involves the focusing of attention to the point
where you can make what you imagine feel real at the same time as
being able to switch off from what is real," she says. "That is
what makes hypnosis work. I don't think it is a lot more complicated
than that. You don't have to formally induce this state called hypnosis
to get some of these things to happen."
Despite the mystery, experts seem to agree that hypnosis is not
dangerous, if it is carried out with a trained hypnotherapist who
has a good understanding of the patient's condition. People who
do not have vivid imaginations and those who are sceptical about
its value may not benefit from hypnosis, as imagination and expectation
are important in determining its effectiveness. Hypnosis is not
regarded as the treatment of choice for people with severe mental
health problems, such as schizophrenia.
As the debate continues, it highlights how little is known about
the closely related and fundamental scientific question of human
consciousness. These complex questions are likely to continue to
baffle scientists for many more years. In the meantime, millions
of people will continue to benefit from hypnosis, even though this
lack of understanding seems to be at odds with the health service
drive for evidence-based medicine.
Hypnosis: the history
Hypnosis was first recognised by the ancient Egyptians and Greeks
as a way of inducing dreams to solve people's problems.
Franz Mesmer (1734-1815), an Austrian doctor, is regarded as the
modern "father of hypnosis". However, the medical profession rejected
what was later termed mesmerism".
James Braid (1796-1860), a Scottish doctor, coined the terms "hypnosis"
and "hypnotism" from the Greek god of sleep, Hypnos. Scientists
now know that hypnosis and sleep are two very different physiological
states. A swinging watch was commonly used in the early days of
hypnotism to allow people to fixate on an object and go into a "trance".
Scottish surgeon James Esdaile (1808-1859) used hypnotism as an
anaesthetic during countless major operations he performed in India.
However, the British medical profession rejected the use of hypnosis
in this way in favour of new anaesthetic drugs.
In 1892, the British Medical Association (BMA) . rst formally recognised
that hypnosis had therapeutic benefits. Hypnosis was used to treat
the physical and psychological effects experienced by soldiers in
the two world wars.
Although public demonstrations of hypnosis have been popular throughout
history, stage hypnotism as a form of television entertainment,
was pioneered by an American, Ormond McGill, who also wrote the
"bible" of stage hypnosis, The Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism,
in 1947.
In 1955, the BMA first supported the teaching of hypnosis in medicine.
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