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Hypnosis can help control cancer pain

A study conducted by Lisa Butler found that hypnosis can help control pain in women with metastatic breast cancer. Photo: DOUGLAS LEVERE

  • “These results suggest that although hypnosis is not at present standard practice for treating a wide range of symptoms that trouble cancer patients, it is worth examining that potential.”

    Lisa Butler
    Associate Professor, School of Social Work
By CHARLES ANZALONE
Published: February 24, 2010

Hypnosis can help alleviate the pain and suffering experienced by women being treated for breast cancer, a study by a faculty member in the School of Social Work has found.

The randomized trial measured pain and suffering, frequency of pain and degree of constant pain among 124 women with metastatic breast cancer, said Lisa D. Butler, associate professor in the School of Social Work, a faculty member in the Buffalo Center for Social Research and first author on the study.

Researchers recorded levels of pain at four-month intervals for a year. Women who were assigned to the treatment group received group psychotherapy, as well as instruction and practice in hypnosis to moderate their pain symptoms. They reported a “significantly less increase in the intensity of pain and suffering over time,” compared with a control group that did not receive the group psychotherapy intervention.

While those using hypnosis reported it helped alleviate the intensity of the pain, they reported no significant reduction in the frequency or constancy of pain episodes.

“The results of this study suggest that the experience of pain and suffering for patients with metastatic breast cancer can be successfully reduced with an intervention that includes hypnosis in a group-therapy setting,” Butler said. “These results augment the growing literature supporting the use of hypnosis as an adjunctive treatment for medical patients experiencing pain.”

The study was published last year in an issue of the American Psychological Association journal Health Psychology.

The researchers also found that within the treatment group, those patients who could be hypnotized more easily—a group the researchers said demonstrated “high hypnotizability”—reported greater benefits from hypnosis. These patients used hypnosis more overall, including outside of the group sessions, and in some cases used it to address other symptoms related to their cancer.

“These results suggest that although hypnosis is not at present standard practice for treating a wide range of symptoms that trouble cancer patients, it is worth examining that potential,” Butler says. “Together, these findings suggest that there may be a number of benefits to the use of hypnosis in cancer care including, but not necessarily limited to, its more traditional application for pain control.”

Butler joined the UB faculty in January 2009 after doing research at Stanford University's School of Medicine. She was hired at UB to strengthen the university's research focus on “extreme events” as part of the UB 2020 strategic planning initiative. She recently published a nationally recognized study on how some people living through an extremely traumatic event—including the 9/11 terrorist attacks—have the ability to recover or even grow in personal and interpersonal functioning.

Reader Comments

Linda Rosenbaum says:

Where could an MS patient could go for this treatment locally?

Posted by Linda Rosenbaum, student, 03/01/10