Does energy balancing provide
relief
for breast-cancer patients?
Catherine Palter recalled being skeptical
as she began her first session of Healing Touch, an energy-balancing
technique, to try to ease the nausea, fatigue and feelings of fear
and worry that accompanied her breast-cancer treatment. "I
didn't expect to feel anything," said Palter, a resident of
San Mateo, California, and a Stanford University environmental planner.
She was in for a surprise. "I almost immediately felt energy
flowing through my body. It was like magic."
That's the issue that Kathy Turner, R.N., a nurse
practitioner in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the
Stanford University School of Medicine, wants to investigate. Last
year she established Healing Partners, a program that offers Healing
Touch through Women's Health @ Stanford. She said it is modeled
on programs in Hawaii and Colorado and described it as involving
a noninvasive form of energy work that aims to promote deep relaxation.
So far, Healing Partners has paired more than 30 breast-cancer patients,
including Palter, with volunteer providers who have been trained
in the technique, according to a Stanford University Medical Center
press release.
She's now looking for both participants and volunteer
providers, who are required to complete two levels of Healing Touch
training and attend a weekend training session before being paired
with a patient. (See below for contact information.)
Healing Touch is based on the Eastern medicine
concept that a person is surrounded by an energy field, and removing
blocks in this field can help or prevent illness. During a session,
the clothed patient lies on a massage table while the practitioner
assesses the patient's energy field by placing her hands a few inches
above the body. She then lightly touches or moves her hands above
the blocked areas, in an effort to increase energy flow.
No published data exists on whether this therapy
offers any relief—and there is no shortage of doctors who
are skeptical.
A 1998 study in the Journal of the American Medical
Association called into question the existence of energy fields.
And David Spiegel, M.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral
science and an expert in complementary therapies, said many researchers,
himself included, are doubtful of the scientific theory behind this
approach. While Spiegel acknowledged it might offer some help, he
attributed that to the positive effects of being touched.
"There used to be an old phrase in
medicine about the laying on of hands," said Spiegel. "The
first thing you did as a doctor was lay your hands on the patient.
You tried to connect with patients physically to determine how you
could help them. I think that's what's happening here."
Yet Turner wonders if there is more to it than
that, and she points to preliminary data showing significant positive
changes among Healing Partners participants. An end-of-program analysis
of 26 participants showed that 69 percent experienced reduced depression
and anxiety, 71 percent experienced increased energy, and 81 percent
experienced an increased quality of life. Some participants have
also reported a reduction of side effects from chemotherapy and
radiation, such as nausea and pain.
Comments from several participants back up these
numbers: Palo Alto psychotherapist Anne Broderick said her sessions
made her feel "wonderful and calm." And Palter credits
her sessions for giving her a "light" feeling that she
said helped her endure treatment.
Turner believes that the value of Healing Touch
might lie in the fact that it offers participants a sense of deep
relaxation and human connection, and she would like to give more
women the opportunity to try the therapy. She's now looking for
both participants and volunteer providers, who are required to complete
two levels of Healing Touch training and attend a weekend training
session before being paired with a patient.
With more patients in the program, Turner wants
to begin to gather more hard data. She plans to use information
from participant questionnaires to design future, randomized studies.
And she hopes to someday expand the program, which is supported
by gifts from the Avon Foundation and a private donor, to other
kinds of patients. "Anyone with cancer deserves this,"
she said.
Healing Partners, which provides free weekly
sessions for six months, is currently open to any breast cancer
patient at any stage of treatment. To register for the program,
please call (650) 736-1802 or email healingpartners@sbcglobal.net.
More information is available online at http://womenshealth.stanford.edu/healingpartners.html. |