Tim Brunson DCH

Welcome to The International Hypnosis Research Institute Web site. Our intention is to support and promote the further worldwide integration of comprehensive evidence-based research and clinical hypnotherapy with mainstream mental health, medicine, and coaching. We do so by disseminating, supporting, and conducting research, providing professional level education, advocating increased level of practitioner competency, and supporting the viability and success of clinical practitioners. Although currently over 80% of our membership is comprised of mental health practitioners, we fully recognize the role, support, involvement, and needs of those in the medical and coaching fields. This site is not intended as a source of medical or psychological advice. Tim Brunson, PhD

Effects of music on auditory hallucination and psychiatric symptoms in people with schizophrenia



Full Title: Effects of listening to music on auditory hallucination and psychiatric symptoms in people with schizophrenia

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of listening to music in inpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia, on their auditory hallucinations, and positive and negative symptoms. METHODS: A quasi-experimental research design with 2x2 cross-over trial and convenience sample was used. Eleven patients (Group AB) listened to music followed by a wash out period and then a usual care period, and 12 patients (Group BA) had a usual care period followed by a wash out period and then listened to music. For one week those who were in the experimental period listened to individualized music using an MP3 player whenever they heard hallucinations. RESULTS: There was a statistically significant decrease in the frequency of auditory hallucinations after listening to the music. There was a decrease in the mean scores for positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and general psychopathology after listening to music, but only negative symptoms showed a statistically significant decrease. The treatment effects on scores for positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and general psychopathology were greater in Group BA than Group AB. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that listening to music may be useful for managing auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia inpatients.

J Korean Acad Nurs. 2009 Feb;39(1):62-71. Na HJ, Yang S. College of Nursing, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.

Nanci Trivellato, MS



Nanci Trivellato, MS is one of world's leading non-local consciousness researchers, with over 20 years of experience as an educator, research, and practioner of out-of-body experience and psychical perception. Trivellato is the editor of the Journal of Conscientiology, a quarterly consciousness science publication read in over 30 countries for over a decade. An international circuit speaker, currently based at IAC Campus in Portugal, she is IAC's Director of Research and Scientific Communication. Trivellato has been featured in numerous media around the world from Brazil to Japan, People Magazine to Univision's Show de Cristina. Her best-known research are a survey on the out-of-body experience with over 12,000 participants; the Projective Field experiments on remote perception; Goal: Intrusionless on training energy perception and self-defense; and studies on the so-called vibrational state.

For more information visit www.iacworld.org.

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