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Hypnosis is likely to be effective for most people suffering from diverse forms of pain, with the possible exception of a minority of patients who are resistant to hypnotic interventions.
Findings
Hypnosis is a set of techniques designed to enhance concentration, minimize
one's usual distractions, and heighten responsiveness to suggestions
to alter one's thoughts, feelings, behavior, or physiological state.
Hypnosis is not a type of psychotherapy. It also is not a treatment
in and of itself; rather, it is a procedure than can be used to
facilitate other types of therapies and treatments. People differ
in the degree to which they respond to hypnosis. The key to becoming
hypnotized is the extent to which a person is hypnotizable, which
is a very reliable and stable individual difference trait that indexes
one's openness to hypnotic suggestions.
Research shows that hypnosis works as part of a treatment program
for a number of psychological and medical conditions, with pain
relief being one of the most researched areas, as shown in a 2000
study by psychologists Steven Lynn, PhD, Irving Kirsch, PhD, Arreed
Barabasz, PhD, Etzel Cardeņa, PhD, and David Patterson, PhD. Among
the benefits associated with hypnosis is the ability to alter the
psychological components of the experience of pain that may then
have an effect on even severe pain.
In recent years, the anecdotal and sometimes exaggerated evidence
for the effectiveness of hypnosis to decrease sensitivity to pain
- known as hypno-analgesia - has been supplemented
by well-controlled experiments. In their 2003 review of controlled
clinical studies, Dr. Patterson and fellow psychologist Mark Jensen,
PhD, found that hypno-analgesia is associated with significant reductions
in: ratings of pain, need for analgesics or sedation, nausea and
vomiting, and length of stay in hospitals. Hypnosis has also been
associated with better overall outcome after medical treatment and
greater physiological stability. Surgeons and other health providers
have reported significantly higher degrees of satisfaction with
their patients treated with hypnosis than with their other patients.
Depending on the phrasing of the hypnotic suggestion, the sensory
and/or affective components of pain and associated brain areas may
be affected (as shown by the brain imaging research of neuropsychologist
Pierre Rainville, PhD, and collaborators in 1999). Patients who
are most receptive to hypnotic suggestions in general, or highly
hypnotizable, have found the greatest and most lasting relief from
hypnosis techniques, but people with moderate suggestibility (the
majority of people) also show improvement. Factors such as motivation
and compliance with treatment may also affect responsiveness to
hypnotic suggestions.
Drs. Patterson and Jensen's review concluded that hypnotic techniques
for the relief of acute pain (an outcome of tissue damage) are superior
to standard care, and often better than other recognized treatments
for pain. Furthermore, a 2002 cost analysis by radiologists Elvira
Lang, MD and Max Rosen, MD, that compared intravenous conscious
sedation with hypnotic sedation during radiology treatment found
that the cost of the hypnotic intervention was twice as inexpensive
as was the cost for the standard sedation procedure. Chronic pain,
which continues beyond the usual time to recover from an injury,
usually involves inter-related psychosocial factors and requires
more complex treatment than that for acute pain. In the case of
chronic pain, Patterson and Jensen's review found hypnosis to be
consistently better than receiving no treatment, and equivalent
to the other techniques that also use suggestion for competing sensations,
such as relaxation and autogenic training (which is similar to self-hypnotism).
Significance
A meta-analysis (a study of studies) in 2000 of 18 published studies by psychologists Guy Montgomery, PhD, Katherine DuHamel, PhD, and William Redd, PhD, showed that 75% of clinical and experimental participants with different types of pain obtained substantial pain relief from hypnotic techniques. Thus, hypnosis is likely to be effective for most people suffering from diverse forms of pain, with the possible exception of a minority of patients who are resistant to hypnotic interventions. Drs. Patterson and Jensen indicate that hypnotic strategies are equivalent or more effective than other treatments for both acute and chronic pain, and they are likely to save both money and time for patients and clinicians. Evidence suggests that hypnosis might be considered a standard of treatment unless the person fails to respond to it or shows a strong opposition against it.
Practical Application
Hypno-analgesia is likely to decrease acute and chronic pain in most individuals, and to save them money in surgical procedures. Hypnotic analgesia has been used successfully in a number of interventions in many clinics, hospitals, and burn care centers, and dental offices. For acute pain, it has proven effective in interventional radiology, various surgical procedures (e.g., appendectomies, tumor excisions), the treatment of burns (dressing changes and the painful removal of dead or contaminated skin tissue), child-birth labor pain, bone marrow aspiration pain, and pain related to dental work, especially so with children. Chronic pain conditions for which hypnosis has been used successfully include, among others, headache, backache, fibromyalgia, carcinoma-related pain, temporal mandibular disorder pain, and mixed chronic pain. Hypnosis can alleviate the sensory and/or affective components of a pain experience, which may be all that is required for acute pain. Chronic conditions, however, may require a comprehensive plan that targets various aspects besides the pain experience. The patient may need help increasing behaviors that foster well-being and functional activity (e.g., exercise, good diet) challenging faulty thinking patterns (e.g., "I cannot do anything about my pain"), restoring range of motion and appropriate body mechanics, and so on. Clinicians using hypno-analgesia should be up to date in other treatments for pain besides hypnosis, consult with other specialists as appropriate, and integrate different strategies to provide the most effective and enduring relief for pain.
Cited Research
Lang, E. V., & Rosen, M. P. (2002). Cost analysis of adjunct hypnosis
with sedation during outpatient interventional radiologic procedures.
Radiology, 222, pp. 375-82.
Lynn, S. J., Kirsch, I., Barabasz, A., Cardeņa, E., & Patterson,
D. (2000). Hypnosis as an empirically supported clinical intervention:
The state of the evidence and a look to the future. International
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, Vol. 48, pp.
235-255.
Montgomery, G. H., DuHamel, K. N., & Redd, W. H. (2000). A meta-analysis
of hypnotically induced analgesia: how effective is hypnosis? International
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, Vol. 48, pp.
138-153.
Patterson, D. R., & Jensen, M. P. (2003). Hypnosis and clinical
pain. Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 129, pp. 495-521.
Rainville, P., Carrier, B., Hofbauer, R. K., Bushnell, M. C.,
& Duncan, G. H. (1999). Dissociation of sensory and affective dimensions
of pain using hypnotic modulation. Pain, Vol. 82, pp. 159-71.
Additional Source
APA Brochure: What is Clinical
Hypnosis and What is it Used For?
American Psychological Association, July 2, 2004
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