Archive for the ‘Hypnotherapy’ Category

There’s no quick fix for depression

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

The NHS favours pills and short-termist CBT. Life-changing therapy takes time, but could save our economy millions

Luiza Sauma  - guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 17 February 2010 12.00 GMT

When it comes to depression, the British stiff upper lip is alive and well. A recent survey by the charity Turning Point reveals that three quarters of British people experience depression at some point, making it one of the UK’s most common health concerns. Despite its prevalence, a third of sufferers do not seek help due to embarrassment, worries about confidentiality and a feeling that they could cope by themselves.

Turning Point’s findings are depressingly familiar to me. As well as being a journalist, I work part-time as a parents’ helpline adviser at the mental health charity YoungMinds, where depression is the most common theme of the calls – even if the “D” word is never mentioned. Some of these calls are carbon copies of each other – the names, locations and social classes change, but the story remains the same: a young person has dropped out of education or employment, they’ve stopped seeing their friends; they can’t even get out of bed or hold down an undemanding part-time job. Why, ask many parents, won’t they just pull themselves together?

I’m originally from Brazil, where chatting openly about your emotions, problems and, indeed, your psychotherapist (among the middle classes, at least) is de rigueur. But I was brought up in Britain, where depression is rarely out of the news, yet is often treated with a mixture of suspicion, contempt and shame. It’s not just young Neets (not in employment, education or training) who are falling prey to it – although one could be rather superficial and say that, what with today’s job market, they have the most to be miserable about.

Depression is, of course, much more than just status anxiety. From Alexander McQueen’s death to Dolly Parton’s recent revelation that she had been suicidal in the 1980s, every week another gifted and admired public figure is revealed to have suffered from crippling misery. Artists, writers and performers, however, have a get-out clause: they are allowed to express their dark sides, so we don’t have to.

Around 31m prescriptions for antidepressants are doled out every year to the British public. After all, pills – like cognitive behavioural therapy – are cheap, and fit neatly into the idea that a depression is a “chemical imbalance” that can be easily cured. The psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Dr John Steiner tells me that the chemical imbalance idea can be “damaging, but it’s partly true. Some people are just more prone to depression than others. But then there’s also an interaction of that person’s genetic make-up with their relationships”. According to Steiner, CBT “can often work in the short term, but it doesn’t affect the underlying problem. It’s a symptom-treatment, like antidepressants”.

Longer-term psychotherapy aims to uncover those underlying problems. But as anyone with depression will know, getting referred on the NHS to anything other than CBT is almost impossible. On the YoungMinds helpline, I’ve even heard of young people being offered electroconvulsive therapy before talking therapy – one would think that it would be the last, not the first or second, resort.

Imagine if you had cancer and you couldn’t get referred to a life-saving treatment. Like cancer, depression kills people and destroys lives – not just of sufferers, but of their families too. Just as there are different types of cancer, there are different types of depression. I suffered a relatively mild version a couple of years ago and I was at pains to disguise it: after all, I had a fantastic job at a newspaper, a wonderful boyfriend and loving, supportive family and friends – what did I have to be miserable about?

A friend of mine has suffered from a more aggressive form of the illness. “It feels walking through treacle,” she said. “Everyday tasks seem exhausting and impossible, people terrifying and hostile, and life an endless desert of weariness and despair.” Unlike me, she’s been through the mill of NHS mental health services, has gulped down the antidepressants and tried CBT, to little or no avail.

“It too often seems like an admittance of weakness, in a way that having a broken arm or gastric flu just doesn’t,” she admits. “I’ve felt very, very patronised by GPs. Being asked questions like, ‘Do you feel worthless?’ or ‘Do you feel suicidal?’ in a form-filling monotone is somewhat dispiriting. It’s hard to be strong and assertive when you’re suffering. And often that’s what you need, when services are very hard to access.”

In short, people who cannot afford private treatment are being locked out by a system that favours cheap, temporary fixes over long-term results. Yes, access to proper treatment for depression – the kind that can actually change one’s life – would be a drain to the economy, but so are all the depressed, under-supported people who make up the majority of incapacity benefit claimants.

Economically, it could make perfect sense, if a more productive, happier Britain was within our grasp.

Want to quit smoking? Switching to mild cigarettes will NOT improve your chances

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

By Daily Mail Reporter 06th November 2009

Smokers who swapped to low-tar cigarettes were less likely to successfully quit the habit

Smokers who hope to kick the habit by first switching to a low-tar or mild brand of cigarette may actually find it harder to quit, researchers said today. They found that smokers who traded to light cigarettes were 50 per cent less likely to kick the habit.

‘It may be that smokers think that a lighter brand is better for their health and is therefore an acceptable alternative to giving up completely,’ said study author Dr Hilary Tindle from the University of Pittsburgh.

Her study of 31,000 smokers found that 12,000, or 38 per cent, had switched to a lighter brand.

Nearly half of these said they had switched brands because they wanted to smoke a less harmful cigarette and hoped to give up smoking completely.

And although they were far more likely to have tried quitting, they were 60 per cent less likely to actually succeed, according to Dr Tindle’s team.

‘Forty-three percent of smokers reported a desire to quit smoking as a reason for switching to lighter cigarettes. While these individuals were the most likely to make an attempt, ironically, they were the least likely to quit smoking,’ Dr Tindle said.

Research published in The Lancet revealed smokers compensate for low tar cigarettes by taking deeper puffs more often. And a study in the British Medical Journal found all current smokers had a far greater risk of lung cancer than people who had never smoked no matter what the tar level of their brand.

Hypnotherapy and Acupuncture can be really effective support techniques for smoking cessation. Call our advice line or e-mail us for more information about what we can offer.

Tel: 0845 4638901 or 01256 463899

Heart attacks drop by tenth due to smoking ban

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

The ban on smoking in public places has triggered a 10 per cent fall in the number of heart attacks.

Published: 13 Sep 2009

Early results of a study commissioned by the Department of Health revealed heart attack rates dropped by about a tenth in England in the year after the ban was introduced in July 2007.

Separate research found an even sharper decrease - 14 per cent - in Scotland, where the ban was imposed a year earlier. Another study in Wales is expected to reveal similar results.

The research into heart attack rates in England is being led by Anna Gilmore of Bath University.  She told The Sunday Times: ”There is already overwhelming evidence that reducing people’s exposure to cigarette smoke reduces hospital admissions due to heart attacks.”

John Britton, director of the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies at Nottingham University, said: ”We always knew a public smoking ban would bring rapid health benefits, but we have been amazed by just how big and how rapid they are.”

Ellen Mason, a senior cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation, said: ”Exposure to cigarette smoke induces rapid changes in blood chemistry, making it much more prone to clotting. In someone who has narrowed or damaged coronary arteries, smoke exposure can tip the balance and cause a heart attack.”

With this in mind it is worth considering hypnotherapy for ceasing smoking. With a solution focused approach results are typically achieved in just one session and without leaving you with the horrible craving left by other methods. This makes it a worth while investment in your health.

Contact NTA for details


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