Posts Tagged ‘mind body health’

Can Expressing Gratitude Improve Your Health?

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Expressing gratitude is one of the most powerful healing techniques available.

Expressing gratitude benefits both you and the person being thanked, according to a recent study.

If you’re experiencing unhappiness or dissatisfaction with someone in your life, a friend, family member, partner or spouse, a simple and frequent expression of gratitude, saying “thank you” may improve your attitude about your relationship, according to research published in Psychological Science.

Gratitude is good for the giver and receiver. It helps by allowing the individual expressing thanks to engage in greater responsibility for the other person’s welfare.

Earlier gratitude research determined that expressions of thanks aided relationships by strengthening them and increasing satisfaction with it. This research evaluated the affect expressed gratitude had on what is known as “communal strength” — the degree of responsibility one partner or friend feels for another.

Nathaniel Lambert, a research associate at Florida State University stated in an interview, the finding makes sense because “when you express gratitude to someone, you are focusing on the good things that person has done for you,” he said. “It makes you see them in a more positive light and helps you to focus in on their good traits.”

Lambert and fellow researchers examined the notion that expressing gratitude helps strengthen relationships in this way by conducting three different studies. The first group completed surveys disclosing how often they expressed gratitude to a partner or friend. There 137 college students that completed the survey. The findings determined that gratitude is positively linked with the person’s perception of this “communal” strength.

The second study involved 218 college students, expressing gratitude predicted boosts in the person’s perception of the relationship’s strength over time. In a third study group, 75 men and women were randomly assigned to one of four groups. Over a three-week period, one group expressed gratitude to a friend; another thought grateful thoughts about a friend, while a third thought about daily activities and a fourth had positive interactions with a friend.

The participants expressing gratitude reported more relationship strength at the study’s end than did those in the other groups.

“The person doing the thanking comes to perceive the relationship as more communal, to see the person more worthwhile to sacrifice for, to go the extra mile to help out,” Lambert said.

Although the studies only looked at the people expressing gratitude, Lambert speculated that “those who are being thanked will often feel an urge to reciprocate. They will want to express their gratitude back. It can become kind of an upward spiral.”

A simple “thank you” can be a healing balm for a relationship that’s turning sour needs, he said. “In relationships today, often people get mired down into what the person isn’t doing for them. That’s one of the neat things about gratitude. It potentially can change the trajectory from a negative focus to more of a positive outlook on the relationship.”

This study is “an important extension of previous research,” said Robert Emmons, a professor of psychology at the University of California Davis, a long-time gratitude researcher and author of Thanks!: How the New Science of Gratitude Can Make You Happier.

The researchers have documented an “easy and often overlooked way to strengthen relationships,” he said. “Gratitude does knit together relationships and bind people into networks of reciprocal obligations.

“Even if one does not feel it, research strongly demonstrates that going through the motions can lead to the emotion.

Looking to find the best information on health and psychology, then visit www.howtogetwellfaster.com, sign up for the free weekly newsletter and receive the best info on holistic health.

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The Write Way to Health Part 2: Does Expressive Writing Improve Disease Outcomes?

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Healthy, well-adjusted people after having emotionally challenging experiences, can carry unprocessed emotions for many decades, be it childhood angst, conflicts with family and friends, or remorse over missteps and lost opportunities. During several scientific studies, researchers asked participants to write about a disturbing experience for 15 to 20 minutes a day for three or four consecutive days. The point of the exercise is not to craft a perfect essay, but to dig deeply into one’s emotional baggage, then translate the experience into language on the page.

Interestingly, an analysis of participants’ writing about trauma found that those whose health improves most tend to use a higher proportion of negative emotion words than those associated with positive emotions. The increasing use of insight, and associated cognitive words over several days of writing is also linked to health improvement. The creation of a coherent story, with the expression of negative emotions, work together in therapeutic writing. Proof of these processes are seen in the immediate improvement in autonomic nervous system activity.

In my opinion, this research confirms the ancient truth, “to thine own self be true.” Self-honesty allows the realization that we have the inherent capacity to define every experience, regardless of the depths of emotional pain it may have caused, rather than allow the experience to define us. We all possess the psychological and spiritual wherewithal to survive all experiences. We also equally possess the ability to heal and to thrive.

The investigators are not certain as to the precise way writing effects the body and makes it effective medicine. Until 1999, research in this area had focused on healthy individuals. Dr. Joshua Smyth and colleagues studied the effects of journaling in individuals experiencing asthma and rheumatoid arthritis. The study is believed to be the first using standardized, quantitative outcome measures to examine how writing about stressful events affects specific illnesses.

The study included 112 patients, 61 asthmatics, and 51 rheumatoid arthritics. 58 asthmatics and 49 arthritics completed the study. Patients were assigned to write either about the most the most stressful event of their lives or emotionally neutral events for only three days, 20 minutes each day. Four months later, nearly half of those who wrote about stressful events such as car accidents, abuse, divorce, or sexuality, had improved significantly. Asthma patients improved lung function by 19% on average. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis, had a 28% improvement of symptoms.

“We can do a good job with medication, but we can do a better job if we also pay attention to people’s psychological needs,” said Dr. Smyth, now an assistant professor of psychology at North Dakota State University.

“This indicates that a very minimal psychological social interaction can have very substantial medical effects. And it indicates that stress may play a role in the progression of illnesses like arthritis and asthma.”

The article was published in the April 14, 1999, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Dr. Smyth stated, “Were the authors to have provided similar outcome evidence about a new drug, it likely would be in widespread use within a short time. Why? We would think we understood the ‘mechanism’ (whether we did or not) and there would be a mediating industry to promote its use.

“Manufacturers of paper and pencils are not likely to push journaling as a treatment addition for the management of asthma and rheumatoid arthritis. But the authors have provided evidence that medical treatment is more effective when standard pharmacological intervention is combined with the management of emotional distress. Ventilation of negative emotions, even just to an unknown reader, seems to have helped these patients acknowledge, bear, and put into perspective their distress.

Looking to find more about holistic health, then visit www.howtogetwellfaster.com to find the best info on journaling for you.

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How to Easily Reduce Postoperative Pain and Anxiety

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Music therapy, the use of music in a health care setting is a rapidly growing technique throughout many hospitals in the US. It is the clinical and evidence based use of music interventions

Adults, seniors, teens children and a wide variety of physical diseases, mothers in labor, acute and chronic pain have all benefited from using music therapy.

While using music as a healing modality dates back to the ancient writings of Plato and Aristotle, the American Music Association notes that it began during the twentieth century as a discipline after WWI and WWII. Musicians of all types, professional and amateur, visited Veteran Administration hospitals throughout the US and performed for thousands of veterans who were being treated for the physical and emotional trauma of war.

To determine if listening to music or having a quiet rest period before and after taking the first walk postoperatively has the capacity to decrease anxiety or pain, researchers at the University of Central Florida’s Department of Nursing created this study. They also sought to determine if the music could positively influence blood pressure, heart and breathing rates and oxygen levels in patients undergoing total knee replacement surgery.

Fifty-six patients having this surgery were assigned randomly to a music listening group or a quiet rest group. Their pain was measured using a standard tool, and their physiology was monitored. The findings showed that there was no statistical difference between the two groups as the participants experienced a significant decrease in pain over time. The evidence supports the use of both to decrease pain and anxiety.

There is no risk of side effects and the possibility of decreased pain and anxiety has the capacity to prevent and or decrease the use of narcotic pain relievers. The researchers suggested that nurses can offer music as an intervention to decrease pain and anxiety in patients having knee replacement surgery.

Want to find out more about how to get well, then visit Elaine R. Ferguson, MD’s site and gem more info on music therapy for your needs.

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