Expectant mothers at a hospital in Greater Manchester will be able to try hypnobirthing, as part of an NHS trial.
Tameside General Hospital is introducing the technique to women who want to take part.
Studies have found self-hypnosis, which started in the United States, allows many women to give birth without pain, and without gas and air, it said.
Women are not distracted from the pain but learn how to stay calm so their muscles relax.
Full story here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-13451637...
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19
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Meditation, hypnosis change 'brain signature'
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Amir Raz gets some funny looks when he talks about using hypnosis and meditation techniques to build attention spans in a hyperactive MTV world.
"Mention contemplation to a lot of people, and all they think of is some kind of (wacky) spiritualism, people sitting around a darkened room with candles, chanting," says Raz, a McGill University professor who holds the Canada Research Chair in the Cognitive Neuroscience of Attention.
"Our ideas are shaped by Hollywood movies. So you talk about hypnosis, and people see something out of a Woody Allen movie, a guy in a turban with bushy eyebrows who wants to put you to sleep."
But "trim away the folkloric fat," and Raz, a cognitive psychologist who worked his way through graduate school doing magic tricks, sees mindfulness training as a valuable, drug-free tool in the struggle to foster attention skills, with positive spinoffs for controlling our emotions and even...
Interesting article from the NCH website :
People often ask “Why isn’t there more research on hypnosis?” In fact, the people who ask this, in my experience, never seem to have read (or even heard of) the main research journals in the field of hypnosis (IJCEH, AJCH, and Contemporary Hypnosis) and are unaware that there’s actually an awful lot of research on hypnosis, arguably more than on any other psychological therapy, apart from cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT). However, one of the problems facing hypnosis researchers is that methods of hypnotherapy are too messy, eclectic and complex to be well-suited to good research design. It helps build an evidence base if a treatment is “manualised” and can be described in a guide so that other researchers can replicate it in independent studies. Hypnotherapists tend to do lots of strange things with clients, making it difficult to isolate which “bits” are effective and which...
An article well worth checking out.
http://www.psychotherapy.net/article/Psychotherapists_Guide_Social_Media...
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