Skip to main content

Faith and Healing


Physicians and researchers are now paying increasing attention to prayer and its powers in healing, relegating the concept that our body and its ailments are not influenced by our minds, to history. Science is reluctantly coming to terms with observations that patients in intensive care units who were prayed for did significantly better in terms of recovery and survival than those who were not prayed for.
Neurosurgeons of LSU Health Sciences Center, Louisiana, USA, evaluated the effect of prayers on the recovery of unconscious patients admitted with traumatic brain injury. They compared 13 patients who received prayers with another 13 with equal severity of injury who did not receive prayers. The analysis showed the group who received prayers did better in terms of survival, and recovery from coma. Doctors are finally waking up. Two decades ago most medics would have discarded a patient’s or his relative’s spiritual aspirations as humbug. In a recent study from Massachussets, USA, Drs Cadge and Ecklund (Southern Medical Journal, 2009) found that the attitude of even senior specialists had become open and accommodating, almost 100% of those interviewed, respecting the wishes of the patient or family towards praying.


Critical illnesses and invasive procedures carry high risk, and doctors and nurses are beginning to accept the limitations and unpredictability of medical science and their efforts in these situations. In another eye opening study, Baumhover N and Hughes L from Arizona, USA, explored the role of spirituality among health care professionals in dealing in these settings; they found that the spiritually inclined professionals were more willing to allow the presence of relatives during invasive procedures or resuscitaion of the critically ill. Allowing the option of patients’ families to remain present by the bedside promotes holistic family centered care.
Many people use religious activity to cope with stressful life events. Dr Ayele and colleagues from Virginia, USA, analysed the scientific publications on this topic and tried to address the question,“Does religious activity really improve health outcomes?”. Based on 16 publications, they concluded that religious intervention, such as intercessory prayer improved success rates of in-vitro fertilization, decreased hospital stay and duration of fever in septic patients, improved rheumatoid arthritis, reduced anxiety, and improved outcome of cardiac disease.
Prayers may decrease our stress levels and boost our immune system. Dr Bormann and colleagues from San Diego, USA showed that prayers could bring down increased corticsol levels in patients with HIV disease. Cortisol suppresses the immune system, and bringing it down could hold promise in strengthening it and improving our fight against diseases.
Does all that I have mentioned above sound like De ja vu? something that you had guessed all along but never really had evidence for? Precisely. Many of us have ignored the teachings of our rishis, yogis and sufis as unfashionable, and shied away from accepting them. Now, research conducted in the west using modern scientific tools, is proving them correct. It is time we rediscoverd our roots and our traditional wisdom with pride.

As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Food Fads in Liver Disorders

In an attempt at trying to do well to those they love, spouses and parents often enforce diets on patients of liver diseases that often turn out to be detrimental. The commonest food fad is pale insipid boiled cabbage being doled out to nauseous patients suffering from hepatitis that makes them puke even more.  The liver, in a way, is a buzzing manufacturing unit that requires lots of energy to keep its multiple functions going. And it derives all this from the food we eat. During disease, such as during an attack of jaundice, when many of the liver cells get killed, the liver attemptsdamage control by trying to regenerate quickly. For its cells to multiply however, it requires a generous supply of energy that comes from carbohydrates, and protein, the building block for its cells and tissues. Boiled green vegetables unfortunately have neither of these. Hence the situation often progresses to that of a starved liver unable to recuperate due to cut-off food suppl...

The Doctor’s Dress

The familiar white coat worn by physicians as their distinctive dress for over 100 years, has started generating  murmurs  of controversy. It is not uncommon to find the blood pressure to be higher when measured by a white-coat-wearing-doctor in the hospital or clinic than the readings obtained at home by relatives.  This is due to the anxiety that the white coat and the hospital setting evokes in patients, and has been termed “White Coat Hypertension”. Mature clinicians often routinely subtract a few points from these measurements when entering records in case charts or calculating the dose of anti-hypertensive medications to be prescribed. The white coat scares children too.  Kids often express their dislike for this dress by crying and screaming and by denying access to their bellies or chest for examination by paediatricians in this attire. Many pediatricians across the world have folded up their white coats and taken to informal colourful dressing to...

Uberification of Health Care

The imaginative concept of matching transportation demands of people with cab facilities using a smartphone platform that Uber is credited to having created is now beginning to be applied to health care as well. At the outset, let me share with you what I understand of Uber. It is an on-line transportation company that develops, markets and operates the Uber mobile app, which allows consumers with smartphones to connect with Uber drivers through a software platform for taxi service. Uber itself does not own any assets such as cars, or hire the drivers. Uber was founded by Tavis Kalanick and Garrett Camp as recently as 2009 in San Francisco, but the impact and success of this “start up” has reverberated across the world, being now valued at US $ 62.5 billion. Fresh successful ideas in one domain often tickle the minds of entrepreneurs in other fields. Healthcare experts are now trying to explore if they can bring about a revolution in their sector as well. The proposition se...