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Self-Hypnosis
for Pain Relief
Excerpt
By
Christine Haran,
Healthology
In the movies, hypnosis usually involves
someone falling under the magical spell of a villainous character.
The hypnotized person then goes into a trance and carries out
the hypnotizer's nefarious plans. In a medical setting, however,
self-hypnosis in which people induce a hypnotic state
by themselves is a tool that people can use to achieve
a sense of control, rather than lose it.
"There is nothing mystical
or magical about hypnosis," explains Dr. David Spiegel, professor
at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. "It's
just a state of altered and highly focused attention."
Dr. Spiegel, past president of the Society for Clinical and
Experimental Hypnosis, says by learning how to attain a hypnotic
state on their own, people can gain control over what's happening
in their bodies.
Below, he discusses the role of self-hypnosis in pain management.
What is self-hypnosis?
All hypnosis is really self-hypnosis. The person inducing hypnosis
doesn't do anything to a person or control them in any way. Medical
professionals are just teaching people how to narrow their focus
of attention, turn inward and put outside of conscious their awareness
of some things that would ordinarily be in consciousness.
The only time I formally hypnotize a patient is the first time
when I am assessing their hypnotizability. After that, I teach
people how to enter the state for themselves. Since hypnosis is
not sleep, but rather highly focused attention, it's a state you
can enter into very quickly if you've got the ability. You can
monitor what you're doing while you're in it, and you can choose
to end it when you want to.
How do you determine someone's receptiveness
to hypnosis?
I do a five-minute test called the hypnotic induction profile.
I give people a series of standard instructions for hypnotic experience.
I'm basically seeing whether they have the capacity to experience
these hypnotically instructed alterations in perception, sensation
and motor control. To evaluate their sensory alternation, for
example, I ask them to imagine that their hand is light and floating
up in the air. If they pull it down, it will float right back
up.
It turns out that hypnotizability in adult life is an extremely
stable trait. It's as stable as IQ. The peak period of hypnotizability
in the human life cycle is children between the ages of 5 and
10. Most 8-year-olds are in trances most of the time. You know,
you call them in for dinner and they don't hear you. So it's actually
quite easy for most children to go into hypnotic state.
Some people have it as adults, some don't, and it's easy to
measure. It's not affiliated with a lot of personality characteristics,
but people who are more hypnotizable tend to rate themselves as
more trusting of others. They are more likely to get absorbed
in movies or novels or plays. They are people who have had early
life experiences of imaginative involvement with parents. But
people who have experienced physical punishment are more likely
to be hypnotizable as well.
What are some of the techniques you
use to teach self-hypnosis?
Typically we ask people to look up and close their eyes. There
is something about disengaging from the usual scanning visual
awareness that seems to help people cut off their usual anxious
preoccupation with the world outside, and turn inward. So we recommend
that they close their eyes, take a deep breath, let their bodies
float and then imagine they are floating or looking at an imaginary
screen or hearing sounds that they may not ordinarily hear.
How can hypnosis be used to alter someone's
perception of pain?
There are three main strategies. One is physical relaxation. When
people are in pain, they are also often tense. Muscle tension
tends to exacerbate the pain by pulling on the area that hurts.
So rather than fighting the pain, if one can focus on an image
that conveys relaxation, like floating, the pain can be reduced.
The second strategy is sensory alteration. You can actually
change your perception of pain. For example, you can imagine that
your hand that hurts is in a pool of cold ice water in an icy
mountain stream. If you focus on the cool tingly numbness instead
of the pain, you learn to filter the hurt out.
Another technique is distraction. You can focus on sensations
in some other part of your body, and therefore reduce the attention
you're paying to the pain.
How often do you have to self-hypnotize
to maintain pain relief?
I encourage my patients to do it for two to three minutes every
one to three hours if they've got pain, and then anytime the pain
starts to get worse. So it is a technique you can carry with you
anywhere and use when you need it.
Has the effect of hypnosis on pain
been studied?
There is really solid evidence that self-hypnosis is helpful.
We did a trial some years ago for women with metastatic breast
cancer that showed that teaching self-hypnosis resulted in a significant
reduction in pain compared to patients who were not taught self-hypnosis.
Elvira Lang, MD, at Harvard Medical School, did a trial involving
240 people who were having a painful invasive interventional radiology
procedure that involved having little cameras inserted through
the arteries. All participants were offered pain medication. One
group was also offered training in self-hypnosis. Another group
had a nurse assigned to them, but no training in self-hypnosis,
and the third group had routine care.
The study showed that the patients who received the hypnosis
training had far less pain and virtually no anxiety, whereas anxiety
was going through the roof for the other patients. The hypnosis
patients had fewer complications with the procedure. They used
far less medication, and it took 17 minutes on average less time
to get through the procedures. So they were more comfortable,
less anxious, had fewer problems and got out sooner.
What kind of studies still need to
be done?
We need more studies evaluating outcome in different contexts,
as we would with any other medical treatment. We need to look
at pain in children undergoing medical procedures; pain control
during surgery; pain for different sorts of problems, from gastrointestinal
to arthritis to other serious chronic pain problems.
Secondly, we need more studies about how hypnosis affects people's
perception of pain. We're learning that there are specific parts
of the brain that are affected by hypnosis for pain relief. One
of them is the anterior singular gyrus, a part of the brain that
helps us focus attention. That seems to be actively involved in
hypnotic analgesia. Parts of the brain that actually process physical
sensation also appear to be involved.
Thirdly, I think we need some studies of the effect of hypnotic
interventions on the practice and cost of healthcare. In Dr. Lane's
hypnosis study, for example, she found that each procedure cost,
on average, $338 less if you taught the patient self-hypnosis.
So there are tremendous economic implications, which also need
to be studied more.
Do you think that self-hypnosis should
be taught more regularly?
Absolutely. It's a safe, effective procedure with virtually no
side effects. A lot of people get scared about the idea of hypnosis
or think they are being controlled. It's really a way of enhancing
your control over your body. I think it ought to be part of any
pain treatment program. I also think it should be more a part
of medical education.
I do think as we do more studies on hypnosis, medicine will
become more accepting of the idea that this isn't mumbo jumbo.
This is science. It's a way in which we can use our own brains
to help ourselves feel better.
Reference
Source 104
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