Meditation and Hypnosis Similarities and DifferencesAnkesh Gorkhali
Meditation:
A means of transforming the mind. Buddhist meditation practices are techniques that encourage and develop concentration, clarity, emotional positivity, and a calm seeing of the true nature of things.
Hypnosis:
The induction of a state of consciousness in which a person apparently loses the power of voluntary action and is highly responsive to suggestion or direction.
Meditation and Hypnosis Similarities and DifferencesAnkesh Gorkhali
Meditation:
A means of transforming the mind. Buddhist meditation practices are techniques that encourage and develop concentration, clarity, emotional positivity, and a calm seeing of the true nature of things.
Hypnosis:
The induction of a state of consciousness in which a person apparently loses the power of voluntary action and is highly responsive to suggestion or direction.
Full e-book on self hypnosis. Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website, GVLN, visit us for more incredible content. Also see us at http://www.lititzpenn.blogspot.com or http://wwww.stagecoachmarket.blogspot.com and other TTC Media websites.
This is an introductory set of slides for anyone interested in Mindful Life Management, one of the Mindfulness based interventions being taught from the Holistic and Stress Research Clinic, Department of Psychiatry, Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram
Full e-book on self hypnosis. Gloucester, Virginia Links and News website, GVLN, visit us for more incredible content. Also see us at http://www.lititzpenn.blogspot.com or http://wwww.stagecoachmarket.blogspot.com and other TTC Media websites.
This is an introductory set of slides for anyone interested in Mindful Life Management, one of the Mindfulness based interventions being taught from the Holistic and Stress Research Clinic, Department of Psychiatry, Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram
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An Overview of Aute and Transient Psychiosis / Brief Psychotic DisorderGaurav Sharma
Introduction: ATPD as a diagnostic entity is of particular History and present-day relevance; however, the concept of ATPD, and its management and prognosis remain contentious.
History: Description given by Kraeplin (1856-1926), Bleuler (1857-1939), Freud (1856-1939), different names in different part of world, types as Amentia, Cycloid psychosis, Bouffée délirante, Psychogenic or reactive psychosis, Schizophreniform psychosis or disorder etc. and description according to DSM-III, DSM-III R, DSM IV and IV-R, DSM 5-R.
Evidence Based Studies: 1. IPSS 2. DOSMeD (Determinants of Outcome of Severe MentalHealth Disorders) (1978-1980) 3. CAP (Cross-cultural study of Acute Psychosis) (1980- 1982)
Relationship Of ATPs With Schizophrenia And Affective Disorders: The risk for affective disorders among FDRs (First degree relatives) of schizophrenics was 6-8%; and the risk for schizophrenia among relatives of affective disorders was 0.5-3.5% and both these risks were much higher than the risk in the general population for the respective disorders.
ATP Validation Studies: Chandigarh Acute Psychosis Study, Chandigarh CAP study, ICMR Acute Psychosis Study and their results discussed.
Recurrence in ATP: Malhotra et al. reported a recurrence rate of 46.6% on 8-year follow-up; whereas Rozario et al. found recurrence in 35% cases of ATP on 5-year follow-up.
Antecedent Factors In ATP: Female preponderance, Low socio-economic status and rural population, Stress preceding the onset, febrile illness etc.
Epidemiology: More often among younger patients (20s and 30s) than among older patients.
More common in women than in men. Results of studies conducted in Nottingham, England, and in developing countries.
Etiology: Role of Febrile Illness, Infectious diseases Hypothalamic–pituitary axis abnormalities.
Management: Role of Second-generation antipsychotics and First generation Antipsychotic and Sociotherapy.
Hypnosis therapy is a form of psychological treatment that is used to induce certain unconscious changes in a patient. These changes can take the form of new reactions, thoughts, attitudes, feelings, or even changes in behavior.
As the name suggests, hypnotherapy is carried out with the help of hypnosis. Thus, the hypnotized person shows unusual behavioral characteristics such as an increased ability to react compared to non-hypnotized persons. One thing to understand is that hypnotherapy is performed and should only be performed by medically trained hypnotherapists. Some people use hypnosis to make other people vulnerable. It is a serious offense.
Read the full article here: https://philahypnosis.com/clinical-hypnosis-therapy/
How To Define Hypnosis? Traversing The Worlds Of Hypnotherapydefinehypnosis
How do you define hypnosis?
When most people hear the word “hypnosis,” their imagination carries them to mysterious, wizardly lands (like those of Las Vegas). Lands where $10 grants you admittance to an arcane chamber of enchantment (for your best friend’s birthday party).
From behind the red curtains, a caped sorcerer appears. Slowly, he begins performing feats of what seem like alchemy, divination, and voodoo (card tricks).
He begins waving a polished, antique pocket watch— now that his audience has consumed a considerable amount of magic potion (Corona Light), they are ready to bear witness to his greatest magic act of all
This is an introductory set of slides about Treatment of Schizophrenia. It aims to create awareness about treatment methods available for caring individuals with schizophrenia.
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Preoperative Management of Patients on GLP-1 Receptor Agonists like Ozempic and Semiglutide
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Report Back from SGO 2024: What’s the Latest in Cervical Cancer?bkling
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New Drug Discovery and Development .....NEHA GUPTA
The "New Drug Discovery and Development" process involves the identification, design, testing, and manufacturing of novel pharmaceutical compounds with the aim of introducing new and improved treatments for various medical conditions. This comprehensive endeavor encompasses various stages, including target identification, preclinical studies, clinical trials, regulatory approval, and post-market surveillance. It involves multidisciplinary collaboration among scientists, researchers, clinicians, regulatory experts, and pharmaceutical companies to bring innovative therapies to market and address unmet medical needs.
Lung Cancer: Artificial Intelligence, Synergetics, Complex System Analysis, S...Oleg Kshivets
RESULTS: Overall life span (LS) was 2252.1±1742.5 days and cumulative 5-year survival (5YS) reached 73.2%, 10 years – 64.8%, 20 years – 42.5%. 513 LCP lived more than 5 years (LS=3124.6±1525.6 days), 148 LCP – more than 10 years (LS=5054.4±1504.1 days).199 LCP died because of LC (LS=562.7±374.5 days). 5YS of LCP after bi/lobectomies was significantly superior in comparison with LCP after pneumonectomies (78.1% vs.63.7%, P=0.00001 by log-rank test). AT significantly improved 5YS (66.3% vs. 34.8%) (P=0.00000 by log-rank test) only for LCP with N1-2. Cox modeling displayed that 5YS of LCP significantly depended on: phase transition (PT) early-invasive LC in terms of synergetics, PT N0—N12, cell ratio factors (ratio between cancer cells- CC and blood cells subpopulations), G1-3, histology, glucose, AT, blood cell circuit, prothrombin index, heparin tolerance, recalcification time (P=0.000-0.038). Neural networks, genetic algorithm selection and bootstrap simulation revealed relationships between 5YS and PT early-invasive LC (rank=1), PT N0—N12 (rank=2), thrombocytes/CC (3), erythrocytes/CC (4), eosinophils/CC (5), healthy cells/CC (6), lymphocytes/CC (7), segmented neutrophils/CC (8), stick neutrophils/CC (9), monocytes/CC (10); leucocytes/CC (11). Correct prediction of 5YS was 100% by neural networks computing (area under ROC curve=1.0; error=0.0).
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New Directions in Targeted Therapeutic Approaches for Older Adults With Mantl...i3 Health
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Target Audience
Hematology/oncology fellows, attending faculty, and other health care professionals involved in the treatment of patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL).
Learning Objectives
1.) Identify clinical and biological prognostic factors that can guide treatment decision making for older adults with MCL
2.) Evaluate emerging data on targeted therapeutic approaches for treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory MCL and their applicability to older adults
3.) Assess mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapies for MCL and their implications for treatment selection
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5. A therapeutic technique, historically
investigated, and debated since many
years
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 5
6. Introduction
Imagination, - facilitates cognitive
restructuring, planning, initiation, and
implementation of behavior change.
Hypnosis can be understood as a form of
controlled imagination.
Hypnosis is a useful instrument for the
psychotherapist, like the scalpel is for the
surgeon.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 6
7. Introduction
Trance states and hypnotic phenomena
can occur spontaneously
Learning to recognize trance - helpful even
if hypnosis is not used in the formal sense.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 7
8. Introduction
Hypnos (G) = sleep
A misleading term complex process of
attentive, receptive concentration.
Focal attention, is heightened during
the hypnotic trance.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 8
9. History
First formally described as therapeutic
instruments in the 18th century by Franz
Anton Mesmer – Animal Magnetism
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 9
10. Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815)
Negative
Attention from
Scientists and
French
Government
Unorthodox
methods and
explanations
of
Magnetic force
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 10
11. Hypnosis declared “heated
imagination” (Paris - 1784)
Banjamin
Franklin
Anton Laurent
Lavoisier
Joseph Ignace
Guillotin
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 11
12. James Braid - Hypnosis
James Braid, (physician
and surgeon – 1840s) in
England during the
1840s,independently
observed similar
phenomena similar to
what Mesmer had
reported.
Trance states using eye
fixation and eye closure.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 12
13. James Braid - Monoideism
1847 created a psychological concept
called "monoideism"—(mental
concentration on a single dominant idea).
Subjects are highly suggestible and could
focus their attention on specific ideas that
would influence behavior.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 13
14. Charcot - Janet
Hypnosis is a
Neurphysiological phenomenon
And a sign of mental illness
Supported
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 14
15. Bernheim – Freud
Hypnosis was a function of
Normal Brain
Central to his
Classical work on Hysteria
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 15
16. Freud gives up formal
Hypnosis
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 16
17. World wars I & II
High incidence of shell-shock
during World War I,
Ernst Simmel, a German
psychoanalyst, hypnosis
for the treatment of war
neurosis.
He developed a technique for
accessing repressed material,
Hypnoanalysis.
Treatment of pain, combat
fatigue, and neurosis.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 17
18. From History…
Hull’s research on suggestibility (1933)
Development of standardized scales (1960s)
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 18
19. 1950s - Acceptance begins
1955 the British Medical Society
formally recognized hypnosis and
recommended that it be taught in medical
schools.
1958, the American Medical Association
and American Psychiatric Association
followed this example.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 19
20. DEFINITION AND THEORY
Hypnosis – attentive, receptive focal
concentration with diminished
peripheral awareness.
All hypnosis is, in essence, self-hypnosis
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 20
21. DEFINITION AND THEORY
Hypnotic experience - characterized
by an intense and sensitive
interpersonal relatedness between
the two
With a relative suspension of critical
judgment.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 21
22. DEFINITION AND THEORY
Currently understood as a normal activity of
a normal mind.
Persons who report having intense
absorbing experiences while reading a
novel, watching a movie, or listening to
music relatively highly hypnotizable.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 22
23. DEFINITION AND THEORY
Laboratory and clinical researches
hypnotizability is a stable and
measurable trait.
Hypnotizability varies somewhat
throughout the life cycle
– Peaking during the late childhood
– Declines during adolescence
– Declines further during senescence.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 23
24. Theories of Hypnosis
A form of deep relaxation (Edmonston
1981)
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 24
25. Theories of Hypnosis
Sociocognitive Theory (Spanos, 1991)
Epiphenomenon – exists as outcome of
other process – Social psychology explains
it as role playing.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 25
26. Theories of Hypnosis
Neo-Dissociative
Theory (Hilgard 1991)
– (Most popular view
of those that believe in
Hypnosis)
Most people can
separate one part of
the mind from another
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 26
27. Theories of Hypnosis
Social-Psychobiological
(Eva Banya 1991)
Subjective experience of
altered consciousness
with somatic and
behavioral changes
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 27
28. SPECTRUM THEORY OF
HYPNOSIS
Hypnotizability has
implications beyond
the choice of hypnosis
to facilitate treatment.
Hypnotizability
represents a
convergence of
biopsychosocial
phenomena.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 28
29. SPECTRUM THEORY OF
HYPNOSIS
A process that transforms
a trait into a state.
The degree of
hypnotizability
information about the
way in which an
individual relates to the
self and the social
environment.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 29
30. Components of
Hypnotizability
Experiencing hypnotic concentration
requires a convergence of three essential
components—all of which are necessary to
some degree—
– Absorption
– Dissociation
– and suggestibility
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 30
31. 1. Absorption
An ability to
reduce
peripheral
awareness to
facilitate greater
focal attention.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 31
32. 2. Dissociation
A functional
separation of
elements of identity,
memory, perception,
consciousness, or
motor response
from the
mainstream of
conscious
awareness.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 32
33. 3. Suggestibility
A tendency to
perceive and accept
signals and
information with a
relative suspension
of customary
critical judgment.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 33
35. Myth 1: Hypnosis Is Sleep
Hypnosis is aroused, attentive concentration.
EEG studies demonstrate that the hypnotic trance
state is consistent with a state of resting alertness
and inconsistent with sleep by EEG criteria.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 35
36. Myth 2: Hypnosis Is Projected
Onto the Patient
The role of the therapist is to
provide an occasion during
which persons may identify,
explore, and mobilize their
own trance capacity.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 36
37. Myth 3: Only Weak or Sick
People Are Hypnotizable
The vast majority of highly hypnotizable persons
do not have mental disorders.
Highly hypnotizable persons are absent among
schizophrenic patients.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 37
38. Myth 4: Everybody is
Hypnotizable
About 5 percent of mentally healthy
persons are not hypnotizable (?).
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 38
39. Myth 5: Females are more
hypnotizable
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 39
40. Myth 6: Hypnosis Is Therapy
There is no
hypnotherapy.
Hypnosis is best used
to facilitate a
primary treatment
strategy.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 40
41. Myth 7: Hypnosis Is
Dangerous
No one has ever been
lost in a trance state or
been psychologically
damaged merely from
entering a trance state.
Compared with other
psychiatric
interventions, hypnosis
is a benign and safe
facilitator of
treatment.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 41
42. Myth 8: Symptom Removal Is
Dangerous
Some psychiatrists believe
that the removal of a
symptom before the
development of insight
regarding the meaning of
the symptom leaves the
original conflict unresolved
Predisposes to development
of a new and possibly more
serious symptom.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 42
43. Myth 9: hypnosis is a “truth
serum, it can retrieve memories”
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 43
44. Myth 10: Hypnosis is just
relaxation
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 44
46. Myth 12: Hypnosis overrules
will
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 46
47. Myth 14: Only some people
can be hypnotized
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 47
48. Myth 15: Hypnosis is caused
by the hypnotist’s power
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 48
49. Myth 16: Hypnosis =
Gullibility
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 49
50. Myth 17: Hypnotic Trance is
Therapeutic
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 50
51. Fields of Application
Stage hypnosis
Psychotherapy
Medical hypnosis
Dental hypnosis
Education
Forensic hypnosis
Sports
Business
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 51
52. INDICATIONS - 1
Smoking Cessation
Management of alcohol use
Weight Control
Enhancing Medical Care
Surgical Preparation
Side effects of Chemotherapy
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 52
53. INDICATIONS -2
Anesthesia
Anxiety Disorders
PTSD
Dissociative Disorders
Psychosomatic Disorders
Removal of wart
To aid psychotherapy
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 53
54. CONTRAINDICATIONS
Paranoid persons
Certain personality disorders
Intoxicated states
Threatening atmosphere
Severe depression
Acute dissociative events
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 54
55. The clinician should
– Explain briefly and directly the nature of
hypnosis
– Emphasize the importance of hypnotizability as
a trait to reduce anxiety about performance or
coercion
– State that the patient may discontinue the trance
experience at any time, and
– Clarify the goals of the hypnotic intervention.
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 55
56. SEE YOU
IN
PART II
Sunday, October 5, 2014 Dr. S. Krishnan 56