Re: [FairfieldLife] American Heart Association report on meditation, blood pressure: TM winner-ish

2013-04-25 Thread Bhairitu
On 04/23/2013 03:09 PM, sparaig wrote:
 http://www.clinicaladvisor.com/aha-releases-recommendations-for-alternative-hypertension-treatments/article/290039/#

 The writing group conferred to TM a Class IIB, Level of Evidence B 
 recommendation in regard to BP-lowering efficacy. TM may be considered in 
 clinical practice to lower BP. Because of many negative studies or mixed 
 results and a paucity of available trials, all other meditation techniques 
 (including MBSR) received a Class III, no benefit, Level of Evidence C 
 recommendation Thus, other meditation techniques are not recommended in 
 clinical practice to lower BP at this time.

 As usual, more research needed, but it's a change from the no consistent 
 effect found for any form of meditation that has been the result of the last 
 few mainstream meta-analyses of the topic.

 Once head-to-head studies between meditation techniques become more common, 
 I'm sure another report will be forthcoming, and with this new report, every 
 proponent-researcher of MBSR will be scrambling to include TM in future 
 research just so they can prove that their form of meditation really is 
 better.

 Stay tuned.


 L



They probably favor TM because TM teachers wear suits instead of 
kurtajamis. :-D



[FairfieldLife] American Heart Association report on meditation, blood pressure: TM winner-ish

2013-04-23 Thread sparaig
http://www.clinicaladvisor.com/aha-releases-recommendations-for-alternative-hypertension-treatments/article/290039/#

The writing group conferred to TM a Class IIB, Level of Evidence B 
recommendation in regard to BP-lowering efficacy. TM may be considered in 
clinical practice to lower BP. Because of many negative studies or mixed 
results and a paucity of available trials, all other meditation techniques 
(including MBSR) received a Class III, no benefit, Level of Evidence C 
recommendation Thus, other meditation techniques are not recommended in 
clinical practice to lower BP at this time.

As usual, more research needed, but it's a change from the no consistent 
effect found for any form of meditation that has been the result of the last 
few mainstream meta-analyses of the topic.

Once head-to-head studies between meditation techniques become more common, I'm 
sure another report will be forthcoming, and with this new report, every 
proponent-researcher of MBSR will be scrambling to include TM in future 
research just so they can prove that their form of meditation really is better.

Stay tuned.


L