Distant healing of surgical wounds: an exploratory study.

Marilyn Schlitz, Harriet W Hopf, Loren Eskenazi, Cassandra Vieten, Dean Radin
Author Information
  1. Marilyn Schlitz: Institute of Noetic Sciences, Petaluma, CA 94952, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Distant healing intention (DHI) is one of the most common complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) healing modalities, but clinical trials to date have provided ambivalent support for its efficacy. One possible reason is that DHI effects may involve variables that are sensitive to unknown, uncontrolled, or uncontrollable factors.
OBJECTIVE: To examine 2 of those potential variables-expectation and belief-we explored the effects of DHI on objective and psychosocial measures associated with surgical wounds in 72 women undergoing plastic surgery.
DESIGN: Participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: blinded and receiving DHI (DH), blinded and not receiving DHI (control), and knowing that they were receiving DHI (expectancy). Outcome measures included collagen deposition in a surrogate wound and several self-report measures. DHI was provided by experienced distant healers. No differences in the main measures were observed across the three groups.
RESULTS: Participants' previous belief in the efficacy of DHI was negatively correlated with the status of their mental health at the end of the study (P = .04, 2-tailed), and healers' perceptions of the quality of their subjective "contact" with the participants were negatively correlated both with change in mood (P = .001) and with collagen deposition (P = .04). A post-hoc analysis found that among participants assigned to receive DHI under blinded conditions, those undergoing reconstructive surgery after breast cancer treatment reported significantly better change in mood than those who were undergoing purely elective cosmetic surgery (P = .004).
CONCLUSION: If future DHI experiments confirm the post-hoc observations, then some of the ambiguity observed in earlier DHI studies may be attributable to interactions among participants' and healers' beliefs, their expectations, and their motivations.

References

  1. Br J Psychol. 2004 May;95(Pt 2):235-47 [PMID: 15142304]
  2. Anal Biochem. 1984 May 1;138(2):390-5 [PMID: 6742416]
  3. Altern Ther Health Med. 1997 Nov;3(6):62-73 [PMID: 9375431]
  4. Lancet. 2005 Nov 19;366(9499):1769-70; author reply 1770-1 [PMID: 16298208]
  5. N Engl J Med. 1996 May 9;334(19):1209-15 [PMID: 8606715]
  6. Wound Repair Regen. 1995 Jul-Sep;3(3):284-91 [PMID: 17173554]
  7. J Reprod Med. 2001 Sep;46(9):781-7 [PMID: 11584476]
  8. Med Care. 1992 Jun;30(6):473-83 [PMID: 1593914]
  9. J Psychosom Res. 2009 Sep;67(3):253-71 [PMID: 19686881]
  10. Soc Work. 2007 Apr;52(2):139-48 [PMID: 17580775]
  11. Altern Ther Health Med. 1997 Nov;3(6):79-86 [PMID: 9375433]
  12. Explore (NY). 2008 Jul-Aug;4(4):235-43 [PMID: 18602616]
  13. West J Med. 1998 Dec;169(6):356-63 [PMID: 9866433]
  14. Adv Data. 2004 May 27;(343):1-19 [PMID: 15188733]
  15. Complement Ther Med. 2007 Mar;15(1):21-9 [PMID: 17352968]
  16. J Surg Res. 1982 Nov;33(5):394-401 [PMID: 7132325]
  17. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009 Apr 15;(2):CD000368 [PMID: 19370557]
  18. J Bioeth Inq. 2005;2(3):142-52 [PMID: 16578941]
  19. J Behav Med. 2007 Aug;30(4):329-38 [PMID: 17487575]
  20. Am Heart J. 2006 Apr;151(4):934-42 [PMID: 16569567]
  21. Ann Behav Med. 2006 Aug;32(1):21-6 [PMID: 16827626]

Grants

  1. R21 AT001437/NCCIH NIH HHS
  2. R21AT001437/NCCIH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Affect
Attitude of Health Personnel
Breast Neoplasms
Collagen
Complementary Therapies
Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic
Culture
Elective Surgical Procedures
Female
Health Status
Humans
Intention
Mental Health
Middle Aged
Perception
Postoperative Complications
Research Design
Self Report
Surgery, Plastic
Treatment Outcome
Trust
Wound Healing
Wounds and Injuries

Chemicals

Collagen

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0DHImeasuresP=healingundergoingsurgeryblindedreceivingDistantprovidedefficacyeffectsmaysurgicalassignedcollagendepositionobservednegativelycorrelatedstudy04healers'participantschangemoodpost-hocamongBACKGROUND:intentiononecommoncomplementaryalternativemedicineCAMmodalitiesclinicaltrialsdateambivalentsupportOnepossiblereasoninvolvevariablessensitiveunknownuncontrolleduncontrollablefactorsOBJECTIVE:examine2potentialvariables-expectationbelief-weexploredobjectivepsychosocialassociatedwounds72womenplasticDESIGN:Participantsrandomly13groups:DHcontrolknowingexpectancyOutcomeincludedsurrogatewoundseveralself-reportexperienceddistanthealersdifferencesmainacrossthreegroupsRESULTS:Participants'previousbeliefstatusmentalhealthend2-tailedperceptionsqualitysubjective"contact"001analysisfoundreceiveconditionsreconstructivebreastcancertreatmentreportedsignificantlybetterpurelyelectivecosmetic004CONCLUSION:futureexperimentsconfirmobservationsambiguityearlierstudiesattributableinteractionsparticipants'beliefsexpectationsmotivationswounds:exploratory

Similar Articles

Cited By