--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "George DeForest" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Blank
>   http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=721613
> Meditation calms the mind, lengthens life: study
> Reuters
> May. 2, 2005 - By Charnicia E. Huggins 
> 
> NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Increasing evidence suggests that 
transcendental meditation may not only reduce stress, but also may 
help adults with high blood pressure to live longer, according to a 
new study.
> 
> "There are many non-drug techniques for reducing blood pressure, 
but none...extend life," study author Dr. Robert H. Schneider, of the 
Maharishi University of Management in Iowa, told Reuters Health.
> 
> He added that the current study shows that "you can live longer 
with a mind-body intervention."
> 
> Transcendental meditation is a technique for calming the body and 
mind, to allow individuals to enter a state of "restful alertness," 
in which the body is awake but the mind is not engaged in conscious 
thought. It is a method of "waking up the body's own self-repair 
mechanisms," Schneider said.
> 
> The new report, published in this month's American Journal of 
Cardiology, is based on a review of data from two studies that showed 
that transcendental meditation helped decrease blood pressure among 
white and African-American adults, respectively. Schneider and his 
team evaluated the association between the meditation technique and 
risk of death among the study participants.
> 
> The two studies included 202 men and women, about 72 years old on 
average, who had pre-hypertension or mild hypertension. They were 
assigned to a transcendental meditation group, or to various 
comparison groups of other relaxation techniques.
> 
> Participants in the two studies were followed for about eight years 
on average -- a maximum of nearly 19 years -- during which 101 
individuals died.
> 
> Overall, men and women who practiced transcendental meditation not 
only had lower blood pressures than those in the other groups, but 
were also 23 percent less likely to die from any cause, Schneider and 
his team report. In particular, they were 30 percent less likely to 
die from cardiovascular disease and 49 percent less likely to die 
from cancer.
> 
> The "integrated holistic" transcendental meditation technique does 
not have any harmful side effects, Schneider said.
> 
> Schneider is the director of the Institute for Natural Medicine and 
Prevention, funded by the National Institutes of Health's National 
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
> 
> SOURCE: American Journal of Cardiology, May 2, 2005. 
> 
> 
> Copyright 2005 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This 
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
> 
> Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures


*****************

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/03/health/03thera.html

"Dr. Arthur Hartz, a professor in the family medicine department at 
the University of Iowa College of Medicine and a co-author of the 
study, said avoiding unnecessary medicine was always a good idea.

But he added: "T.M. classes are expensive, and all behavioral 
interventions require considerable effort to learn, and time and 
discipline to maintain. My guess is that they represent the best 
therapy for only a small percentage of patients with hypertension."

(more at link)







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