Hypnosis is one of the world’s oldest sciences. It has existed, in one form or another, as long as records have been kept. Hypnosis, also referred to as hypnotherapy or hypnotic suggestion, is a trance-like state in which you have heightened focus and concentration.
Don’t confuse medical hypnosis with the flamboyant shows where a performer, swinging watch in hand, places unsuspecting volunteers in a trance and instructs them to perform silly tasks. Hypnotherapy is a legitimate treatment for a myriad of medical problems, and unlike many treatments, it is safe and noninvasive.
The goal of medical hypnosis is to improve overall health and wellness by facilitating relaxation and mindfulness. Recent research supports the view that hypnotic suggestions effectively change brain activity and, in turn, aspects of a persons physiological and neurological functions. Here is some background information on this emerging therapeutic modality and what you need to know to properly code medical hypnosis.
What
is Hypnotherapy?
Hypnosis
is an internationally recognized psychotherapeutic technique for treating
mental and psychosomatic issues. A trained hypnotist induces an altered state
of awareness, perception, or consciousness using verbal repetition and mental
images. They then provide suggestions for changes in sensation, perception,
cognition, affect, mood, or behavior. While hypnotized, patients usually feel
calm and focused, have reduced peripheral awareness, and have an enhanced
capacity for response to suggestion. This focused state makes the brain more
flexible. While patients are in this state of heightened awareness and
suggestibility, they can access sources of distress and experience changes in
the way they think, feel, and behave.It’s important to note that people’s response to hypnosis varies and it is more effective when the patient wants to be hypnotized. Although people are more open to suggestion during hypnosis, they don’t lose behavioral control. The hypnotherapist strives to uncover subconscious motivations, access repressed memories, perform regression therapy, and use the power of suggestion to “re-map” the mind’s responses to stimuli. This modality helps the therapist to achieve an alteration in the patient’s thought and behavior patterns in hopes of treating a psychological or physical problem.
Medical
Problems Hypnosis Is Proven to Help
Hypnosis
has been studied for a number of conditions. It has helped patients gain
control over undesired behaviors including addictions, phobias, and obesity, as
well as cope better with pain, anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress
disorder, fatigue, gastrointestinal and dermatological disorders, and countless
other issues.“Hypnosis takes advantage of the fact that people are able to be open to absorbing new ideas,” Dr. Mark P. Jensen, a pain expert at the University of Washington who researches hypnosis says. “You get someone’s attention and then you offer them a new way of looking at a problem that will make the problem easier for them to manage.”
Comments
Post a Comment