Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Using Hypnotherapy in Fear or Stress

Question: Discuss about the Using Hypnotherapy in Fear or Stress. Answer: Introduction Treatment of pain or fear with hypnotherapy is an alternative that a large number of people are finding useful nowadays that is cost effective and a highly relaxable approach. Recent studies show that hypnosis is helping patients overcome the pain from various acute or chronic diseases and also from various fear. Hypnotherapists conduct sessions of treatment of acute headaches and migraines where their approach consists of making the person relaxed so that he can connect his mind and body in such a way that his body starts conversing. Therapists try to find out the root of the disease that might make them travel to the patients childhood (Zimberoff and Hartman 2014). Various patients have positive results from these treatments. In the case of cancer treatments, patients go through extensive episodes of pain, fear, sleeping disorder, emotional outbursts, and anxiety. Many patients, taking medications complain of discomfort. Subconscious mind mainly gives a reason for anxiety and stress as the main reason that holds the background of the pain that is faced during this episode (Plaskota et al. 2012). A person suffering from dementia also depends on a great degree of hypnotherapy as the main resort for their treatment. Medications and palliative care eventually fail. At that time hypnotherapy is the main treatment that gives an excellent result in reviving the degree of their memory, cognitive ability as well as a feeling of socialization (Connors et al. 2014). Research studies have shown that people are suffering from arthritis often is benefitted from the hypnotherapy than medication. Hypnotherapy not only heals from the emotional level but also heals the swelling and the aches (Sadiq et al. 2016). Persons who have suffered from spinal cord injury suffers acute pain before and during the surgery, and chronic aches pursue even after surgery is over. Chronic pain accompanies a large level of depression as well as anxiety. Hypnosis is currently used to provide relief. However, the therapist should never demand that the pain will entirely go away. He can only ascertain that it would enhance his patience and provide him with positivity and relaxations that would, in turn, lead him to lead a better life (Heutink 2014). A U.S Army soldier who suffered a massive spinal cord accident declared that after six sittings of self-hypnosis method, his experience of chronic pain was much reduced. Hypnotherapy is highly advantageous in treating with various kinds of fear. The basis and the source of fear should be judged first. While visiting a doctor, one describes a problem from the point of view of oneself, which entirely consists of emotions that is a part of the conscious mind. Herein the information of the subconscious minds is not processed that might contain the root of the fear and the anxiety. Hypnotherapy mainly treats from the root of these subconscious minds. Fear of commitment towards a relationship was once assessed by a researcher who studied it on a lady who had such a fear in life and could not settle herself in a relationship. She was irritated and frustrated of her life as the problem could not be solved by anyone. She resorted to hypnotherapy where her specialist found out to some unwelcome situations that she faced in her childhood with her mother repeatedly being rejected by male partners and eventually shattered, led her to a development of a phobia tow ards committing to someone in fear of getting betrayed. Thus, she became a sole believer in the theory after her betterment in life. Therefore, the base and root of any fear be a fear towards animals or any particular objects or events, may be treated from the various information of the subconscious mind (Williamson and Gregory 2015). Various kinds of diseases and different sorts of fear may be treated by hypnotherapy and is nowadays relied upon by a lot of physicians as a complementary treatment for quick and complete recovery of an individual. References: Connors, M.H., Barnier, A.J., Langdon, R., Cox, R.E., Polito, V. and Coltheart, M., 2014. Delusions in the hypnosis laboratory: Modeling different pathways to mirrored-self misidentification.Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research, and Practice,1(2), p.184. Heutink, M., 2014. Cognitive behavioural treatment programme for chronic neuropathic pain after spinal cord injury.Brain Center Rudolf Magnus,53. Plaskota, M., Lucas, C., Pizzoferro, K., Saini, T., Evans, R. and Cook, K., 2012. A hypnotherapy intervention for the treatment of anxiety in patients with cancer receiving palliative care.International journal of palliative nursing,18(2). Sadiq, S., Kaur, S., Khajuria, V., Gupta, S. and Sharma, A., 2016. Complementary and alternative medicine use in medical OPD patients of rheumatoid arthritis in a tertiary care hospital.National Journal of Physiology, Pharmacy and Pharmacology,6(4). Williamson, M. and Gregory, C., 2015. Hypnotherapy: the salutogenic solution to dealing with phobias.The practising midwife,18(5), pp.35-37. Zimberoff, D. and Hartman, D., 2014. Applications of hypnosis and hypnotherapy: a compilation of brief monographs.Journal of Heart Centered Therapies,17(1), pp.101-149.

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