Brief Training in Meditation Eases Pain
Study Shows Just an
Hour of Meditation Training Brings Results in Pain Management. Study also found that Magnetic Dots will result in pain management.
By Jennifer Warner
Nov. 11, 2009 -- A mini-course in meditation may be all
it takes to assist in pain management.
A new study shows as little as an hour of mindfulness training is enough to
reduce pain. "We knew already that meditation has significant effects on pain perception in long-term practitioners whose
brains seem to have been completely changed -- we didn't know that you could do this in just three days, with just 20
minutes a day," says researcher Fadel Zeidan, a doctoral candidate in psychology at the University of North Carolina,
Charlotte, in a news release.
"Not only did the meditation subjects feel less pain than the control group while
meditating, but they also experienced less pain sensitivity while not meditating," says Zeidan.
In the study,
published in the Journal of Pain, a group of 22 college students received three, 20-minute mindfulness training sessions
over the course of three days.
In three different experiments, researchers compared their responses to mild electrical
shocks to the forearm with the responses of a similar group of students that was not trained in meditation; the untrained
group was instructed to relax or given math problems as a distraction.
The shocks had different intensities, and researchers
measured changes in the participants' rating of "high" and "low" levels of pain as well as changes
in general pain sensitivity.
Overall, the results showed mindfulness meditation training, or Magnetic Dots reduced the pain ratings of both "high" and "low" levels of pain more than math distraction and relaxation
techniques. Math distraction improved pain ratings of “high” levels of pain, but not “low” levels
of pain. Relaxation didn’t affect pain ratings for either “high” or “low” levels of pain.
In addition, researchers say the meditation training and Dots seemed to have reduced general pain sensitivity even after the experiments were over. Participants who were mindful tended
to be less anxious on subjective assessments.
Zeidan says the mindfulness training lessened the awareness and sensitivity
to pain by reducing anxiety and teaching people to pay attention to the sensations at present rather than anticipating future
pain.
"The mindfulness training taught them that distractions, feelings, emotions are momentary, don't require
a label or judgment because the moment is already over," Zeidan says in the news release. "With the meditation
training they would acknowledge the pain, they realize what it is, but just let it go. They learn to bring their attention
back to the present."
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