--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "ShempMcGurk" <shempmcg...@...> wrote:
>
> Big deal.
> 
> Even if, as a result of the research study, it comes out as a positive thing 
> to do TM, who trusts the TMO anymore?  Heck, I'm a 36 year regular meditator 
> and even I don't trust their research...
> 
>

hum, trust. in TMO or Maharishi over the years.  Should have been an 
interesting thing to have polled and followed in meditators.  Even now.



 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, nablusoss1008 <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > NIH grants $1 million to study whether Transcendental Meditation can
> > prevent future heart attacks in CHD patients
> > </news/20091107/NIH-grants-241-million-to-study-whether-Transcendental-M\
> > editation-can-prevent-future-heart-attacks-in-CHD-patients.aspx> 7.
> > november 2009 00:01            NIH/National Heart, Lung, and Blood
> > Institute provides $1 million for new study at Columbia University
> > Medical Center
> > The National Institutes of Health's National Heart, Lung, and Blood
> > Institute will fund a $1 million collaborative study by the Center for
> > Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University of Management
> > Research Institute and Columbia University Medical Center to determine
> > whether the stress-reducing Transcendental Meditation technique can help
> > patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) prevent future heart attacks
> > </health/What-is-a-Heart-Attack.aspx> , strokes and death.
> > 
> > The 12-week "Randomized Controlled Trial of Stress Reduction in the
> > Secondary Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease in African Americans,"
> > will be conducted at Columbia University Medical Center in New York
> > City. The trial will examine 56 patients who have had a heart attack
> > </health/What-is-a-Heart-Attack.aspx>  or bypass surgery, angioplasty,
> > or chronic angina.
> > 
> > "For decades, stress has been implicated in the cause and progression of
> > heart disease," said Robert Schneider, M.D., F.A.C.C., lead author and
> > director of the NIH-funded Center for Natural Medicine and Prevention.
> > "And while standard cardiac rehabilitation usually includes supervised
> > exercise and lifestyle education, it does not usually include a formal
> > stress reduction program.
> > 
> > "Now, for the first time, this study will evaluate whether adding stress
> > reduction through the Transcendental Meditation technique to
> > conventional cardiac rehabilitation will aid in the treatment of serious
> > CHD compared to conventional cardiac rehabilitation alone," Dr.
> > Schneider said.
> > 
> > Patients will be carefully evaluated before and after the study for
> > changes in their coronary artery disease with the most advanced
> > noninvasive methods for measuring cardiac function-PET or positron
> > emission tomography. According to Sabahat Bokhari, MD, Director of
> > Nuclear Cardiology at Columbia University Medical Center and study
> > co-director, "PET is an innovative imaging technology that allows us to
> > visually and non-invasively study blood flow to the heart. With this
> > state-of-the-art technology, doctors can now measure the blood flow to
> > the heart and thus quantify the full impact of stress reduction on CHD."
> > 
> > The NIH funding allocation is part of the Obama Administration's
> > American Reinvestment and Recovery Act-or economic stimulus bill.
> > Competition for the funding was fierce with more than 20,000
> > applications for the Challenge Grants category and only 840 awarded. "In
> > the current climate of health care reform, the purpose of this grant is
> > to find more effective treatments for heart disease and thereby find
> > more effective ways to reduce health care costs," Dr. Schneider said.
> > 
> > "The NHLBI's Recovery Act funds will make it possible to evaluate
> > Transcendental Meditation as a promising tool in helping to prevent
> > heart attacks </health/What-is-a-Heart-Attack.aspx> , strokes, and death
> > related to coronary events. This is worthwhile research since we know
> > that strong emotional stress can lead to conditions such as arrhythmia
> > and hypertension," said NHLBI Director Elizabeth Nabel, M.D.
> > 
> > Results from several earlier trials on the Transcendental Meditation
> > program found reductions in risk factors for heart disease, such as
> > hypertension, psychological stress, insulin resistance, and build-up of
> > atherosclerosis in the arteries, with indications of reduced mortality
> > from heart disease. This newly funded study will directly evaluate
> > coronary artery disease and continue to examine the potential of
> > meditation for improvements in cardiovascular health.
> > 
> > 
> >     * Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in the
> > United States
> > 
> > 
> >     * There are nearly 1.5 million heart attacks
> > </health/What-is-a-Heart-Attack.aspx>  per year in the US, according the
> > American Heart Association
> > 
> > 
> >     * An American will suffer a heart attack
> > </health/What-is-a-Heart-Attack.aspx>  every 34 seconds
> > 
> > 
> >     * Coronary heart disease is also the leading cause of soaring health
> > care costs; more than $475 billion spent annually on treating CHD,
> > including
> >     * $100,000 for each coronary bypass surgery
> >     * $50,000 for each angioplasty
> >     * $30,000 for each diagnostic cardiac catheterization
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> >     * There are nearly 500,000 coronary artery bypass grafts and 1.3
> > million angioplasties performed every year
> > 
> > 
> >     * Stress is thought to contribute to development of CHD
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > Source: Maharishi University of Management <http://www.mum.edu/>
> >
>


Reply via email to