New York Times, March 31, 2006

Long-Awaited Medical Study Questions the Power of Prayer
 
By BENEDICT CAREY

Prayers offered by strangers had no effect on the recovery of people 
who were undergoing heart surgery, a large and long-awaited study has 
found.

And patients who knew they were being prayed for had a higher rate of 
post-operative complications like abnormal heart rhythms, perhaps 
because of the expectations the prayers created, the researchers 
suggested. 

Because it is the most scientifically rigorous investigation of 
whether prayer can heal illness, the study, begun almost a decade ago 
and involving more than 1,800 patients, has for years been the 
subject of speculation.

The question has been a contentious one among researchers. Proponents 
have argued that prayer is perhaps the most deeply human response to 
disease, and that it may relieve suffering by some mechanism that is 
not yet understood. Skeptics have contended that studying prayer is a 
waste of money and that it presupposes supernatural intervention, 
putting it by definition beyond the reach of science. 

At least 10 studies of the effects of prayer have been carried out in 
the last six years, with mixed results. The new study was intended to 
overcome flaws in the earlier investigations. The report was 
scheduled to appear in The American Heart Journal next week, but the 
journal's publisher released it online yesterday. 

In a hurriedly convened news conference, the study's authors, led by 
Dr. Herbert Benson, a cardiologist and director of the Mind/Body 
Medical Institute near Boston, said that the findings were not the 
last word on the effects of so-called intercessory prayer. But the 
results, they said, raised questions about how and whether patients 
should be told that prayers were being offered for them.

Read more here:
http://tinyurl.com/p6g9s





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