靈氣處理急性及慢性疼痛 (英)


Reiki and Pain 靈氣處理急性及慢性疼痛

Millions of Canadians suffer from chronic pain. According to Chronic Pain Association of Canada,[i] over 18% of Canadians (some 5,400,000 people) suffer from severe chronic pain. Over 70% of cancer patients experience moderate to severe pain during their illness. At any given moment, half of all Canadians will experience some kind of pain. A majority of Canadians experience head pain at least monthly. This article looks at the use of Reiki for the management of chronic pain.

How much pain can Reiki be used to help with? Jeri Mills, M.D., used Reiki for over 10 years in her OB/GYN practice and has documented her experiences in a book “Tapestry of Healing: Where Reiki and Medicine Intertwine.” [iii] She observes, "Most women slept through the first half of labor, some slept through their entire labor with only Reiki for pain control. “[iv]

Ann Berger, R.N., M.S.N., M.D., Medical oncologist specializing in pain treatment, Chief of the Pain and Palliative Care Service at the National Institute of Health in Washington, D.C has said: “We use probably 50-80 percent of nonpharmacologic methods in our NIH pain clinic, meaning non-medication. The things we use include massage, relaxation, hypnosis, and Reiki therapy, which is also very helpful in fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndromes.” [v] There is anecdotal evidence that Reiki has been successful in the treatment of the pain associated with RSD (“causalgia”)[vi], the most intense pain mapped on this figure.

Reiki programmes exist at a number of other palliative care centres and chronic pain including: New Hampshire's Center for Integrative Medicine, the Pain Management Center at Elliot Hospital in NH, Ottawa's Sandy Hill Community Health Centre (for treating the HIV/AIDS community), Bruce House AIDS hospice, the AIDS-Committee of Ottawa, The Marvelle Koffler Breast Centre recovery centre for breast cancer patients at Toronto's Mt. Sinai hospital, Portsmouth Regional Hospital's Pain Management centre, the women's health centre at the University of Connecticut's Charlotte Johnson Hollelder Center, and the Yale/New-Haven Hospital.

The results: one double-blind study[vii] found that “Reiki is an effective modality for reducing pain, depression, and anxiety”; Hartford hospital reports that Reiki provides significant pain relief for surgery patients[viii]; Edmonton’s Cross Cancer Institute concluded that Reiki showed a highly significant reduction in pain in a pain management study including cancer. In a study of Reiki for treating HIV-related pain and anxiety[ix], Pamela Miles found that newly trained Reiki practitioners perceived reductions in pain and anxiety when they performed Reiki on themselves or classmates.

Reiki reduces pain, but it also works to improve some of the correlated effects of chronic pain, the psychological impacts: anxiety and depression. One group[x] specifically found that “Reiki is an effective modality for reducing …depression, and anxiety”; a recent review of Reiki practice in the US found that hospital “…staff, patients, and program administrators report a number of benefits including reduced anxiety and …decreased numbers of self-reported common gerontological complaints such as anxiety, loneliness, insomnia, and pain…” [xi]


Summary (總結)

Reiki therapy is safe and non-invasive. It is being used to facilitate relaxation and recovery, decrease anxiety and treat pain[xii] in hospices, nursing homes, emergency rooms, operating rooms, organ transplantation care units, pediatric, neonatal and OB/GYN units. It can be a helpful addition to conventional therapy for HIV/AIDS and cancer patients[xiii], [xiv]. Reiki can be learned by both the person experiencing the pain and his or her caregivers, and can improve the quality of life of many chronic pain sufferers.


★ This material may be used to promote Reiki and Reiki programmes in health care centres so long as the material is used intact and includes the copyright and attribution.

Reiki is a complement to treatment by a physician. It does not provide services in lieu of a doctor, nor is it a medical diagnostic tool. However, there is a growing body of opinion that integrative medicine that takes advantage of all parts of the care spectrum as appropriate is more effective (and cost-effective) than allopathic treatment alone.

(作者) Author: Peter Zorzella, founded the Ontario Reiki Programme Centre to make healing through Reiki available to everyone who could benefit from it.


★ References: (本論文參考資料來源)

[i] http://www.chronicpaincanada.org/

[ii] Replotted from various sources including www.rsdcare.org and Andre van Zundert, Intensity and Prevalence of Labour Pain (from Melzack R 1984. 'The Myth of Painless Childbirth.'), http://www.manbit.com/oa/f58-1.htm

[iii] www.tapestryofhealing.com

[iv] Jeri Mills, M.D., Reiki in Hospitals, How I introduced Reiki Treatments into my Obstetrics and Gynecology Practice, Reiki News Magazine, Summer 2003

[v] Ann Berger, R.N., M.S.N., M.D., Medical oncologist specializing in pain treatment. Chief of the Pain and Palliative Care Service at the National Institute of Health in Washington, D.C. http://www.breastcancer.org/cmty_trans_2002_4_18.html

[vi] Anecdotal: http://people.becon.org/~rsdinfo/english/therapy/survival.html ,

http://www.nopainzone.com/ and others

[vii] Linda J. Dressen & Sangeeta Singg, Ph.D., ISSSEEM Journal Vol. 9 No.1, Effects of Reiki on Pain and Selected Affective and Personality Variables of Chronically Ill Patients, http://www.issseem.org/journal.html

[viii] http://www.harthosp.org/nursing/professionals/pdf/Newsletter-06-2001.pdf

[ix] P.Miles, Preliminary Report on the use of Reiki for HIV-related pain and Anxiety, Alternative Therapies, Mar/APR 2003, Vol 9, No2, pp 36,

http://www.pamelamilesreiki.com/pdf/research_letter.pdf

[x] Linda J. Dressen & Sangeeta Singg, Ph.D., ISSSEEM Journal Vol. 7 No.2, Effects of Reiki on Pain and Selected Affective and Personality Variables of Chronically Ill Patients, http://www.issseem.org/journal.html

[xi] P. Miles, G. True, Reiki – Review of a Biofield Therapy. History, Theory, Practice, and Research, Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, Vol. 9, No 2, pp. 62-71 (2003) http://www.alternative-therapies.com/at/pdfarticles/0103reiki.pdf

[xii] P. Miles, G. True, Reiki – Review of a Biofield Therapy. History, Theory, Practice, and Research, Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, Vol. 9, No 2, pp. 62-71 (2003) http://www.alternative-therapies.com/at/pdfarticles/0103reiki.pdf

[xiii] P. Miles, G. True, Reiki – Review of a Biofield Therapy. History, Theory, Practice, and Research, Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, Vol. 9, No 2, pp. 62-71 (2003) http://www.alternative-therapies.com/at/pdfarticles/0103reiki.pdf

[xiv] Fred Sicher, MA, Elisabeth Targ, MD*, Dan Moore II, PhD, Helene Smith, PhD, A Randomized Double-Blind Study Of The Effect Of Distant Healing In A Population With Advanced AIDS, Western Journal of Medicine, December 1998, Vol 169, No. 6, pp. 356-363



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