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This is the Pilot Study of the
Tapping Treatment
Used in 11 Clinics over 14 Years
Note: This paper was written and
appears in Energy psychology interactive: An integrated book
and CD program for learning the fundamental of energy psychology.
Ashland, OR: Innersource. For further information, visit: http://www.innersource.net/
ENERGY PSYCHOLOGY
Theory, Indications, Evidence
Joaquín Andrade, M.D.
David Feinstein, Ph.D.
Despite its odd-seeming procedures and eye-raising
claims, evidence is accumulating that energy-based psychotherapy,
which involves stimulating acupuncture points or other energy systems
while bringing troubling emotions or situations to mind,1 is more
effective in the treatment of anxiety disorders than the current
standard of care, which utilizes a combination of medication and
cognitive behavior therapy. This paper 1) presents preliminary data
supporting this assertion, 2) discusses indications and contraindications
for the use of energy therapy with anxiety as well as other conditions,
and 3) speculates on the mechanisms by which a) tapping specific
areas of the skin while b) a stimulus that triggers a disturbed
emotional response is mentally accessed apparently alleviates certain
psychological disorders.
A Winding Road to Effective Anxiety Treatment
The first author describes his initial encounter with panic disorder,
in a crowded urban hospital emergency room, some 30 years ago: The
patient was trembling, dizzy, and terrified, pleading, “Help
me, Doc, I feel like I’m gonna die!” My medical training
had not prepared me for this moment, and I emerged from it determined
that I would have a better response the next time I was faced with
a patient in acute panic.
NOTE: This paper was written for and appears in Energy Psychology
Interactive: An Integrated Book and CD Program for Learning the
Fundamentals of Energy Psychology (Ashland, OR: Innersource, in
press). Phil Friedman, Ph.D., and Gary Craig provided astute critiques
of an earlier version of this paper, and their contributions are
gratefully acknowledged. Permission to copy for personal and educational
purposes, with this note included, is freely granted.
For further information, visit:
www.innersource.net
This was the first step on a long and winding road. I studied with
acknowledged experts on anxiety disorders, attended relevant professional
meetings, talked with famous international specialists, read the
books they recommended, did my own literature searches, prescribed
medications, applied various forms of psychotherapy (from psychodynamic
to Gestalt to NLP) learned acupuncture in China, made referrals
to alternative practitioners (including those specializing in homeopathy,
cranial sacral therapy, chiropractic, flower remedies, applied kinesiology,
ozone therapy, and Ayurvedic), sent people on spiritual retreats,
used all forms of machines from biofeedback to electric acupuncture,
even resorted to sensory deprivation (confining a panic patient
in a sensory deprivation tank is a distinguishing sign of a therapist’s
desperation).
The consistent finding: disappointing results. My colleagues and
I were making a difference for perhaps 40 to 50 percent of these
people, albeit with multiple relapses, partial cures, and many who
never completed treatment. Later, we combined alprazolam and fluoxetine
with cognitive behavior therapy, obtaining slightly better outcomes.
But never were we able to reach the 70 percent in 20 sessions we
had read about. Then came Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing
(EMDR), which we learned as an almost secret practice some friends
were doing in an East Coast hospital. We began to get more satisfactory
responses, yet along with them, disturbing abreactions.
We then learned about tapping selected acupuncture points while
having the patient imagine anxiety-producing situations. It was
a huge leap forward! We began to obtain unequivocal positive results
with the majority of panic patients we treated. At first we used
generic tapping sequences. Then tapping sequences tailored for panic.
Then tapping sequences based on diagnosing the energy pathways involved
in each patient’s unique condition. All of these strategies
yielded good results, slightly better with diagnosis-based sequences,
averaging about a 70 percent success rate.
We found we could further enhance these encouraging outcomes by
limiting sugar, coffee, and alcohol intake and prescribing a physical
exercise program. We emphasized the cultivation of enjoyment. We
showed our patients how Norman Cousins used laughter in his own
healing and encouraged them to engage in sincere laughter for five
minutes twice each day. We introduced natural metabolic substances,
such as L-tryptophan, L-arginine, and glutamic acid. For rapid symptom
relief in severe cases, we found we could combine a brief initial
course of medication with the tapping.
With this regime, we have been able to surpass the 70 percent mark.
And we have gathered substantial experience indicating that stimulating
selected acupoints is at the heart of the treatment and is often
sufficient as the sole intervention. Over a 14-year period, our
multidisciplinary team, including 36 therapists (2), has applied
tapping techniques (we also use the term “brief sensory emotional
interventions”) with some 31,400 patients in eleven treatment
centers in Uruguay and Argentina. The most prevalent diagnosis (3)
was anxiety disorder (4). For 29,000 of these patients, our documentation
included an intake history, a record of the procedures administered,
clinical responses, and follow-up interviews (by phone or in person)
at one month, three months, six months, and twelve months. We have
also systematically conducted numerous clinical trials. Our conclusion,
in brief: No reasonable clinician, regardless of school of practice,
can disregard the clinical responses that tapping elicits in anxiety
disorders (over 70% improvement in a large sample in 11 centers
involving 36 therapists over 14 years).
Treating Anxiety
During any six-month period, nine percent of Americans are afflicted
with an anxiety disorder—panic disorder, post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), specific phobias, social phobias, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, or generalized anxiety disorder (background information
for this section was drawn from the website of the American Psychiatric
Association, www.psych.org). While anxiety is an emotion designed
to cause us to either flee from danger or to be fully focused and
motivated in situations that demand effective action, if the mechanisms
that control this process become impaired and anxiety will not turn
off or goes into overdrive for no detectable reason, the experience
is hard to bear. In addition to psychic distress that can be overwhelming,
anxiety disorders often interfere with a person’s ability
to function. They not only occupy the mind with panic, consuming
fears, excessive worry, terrifying flashbacks, or horrific scenarios,
they can permeate the body with shakes, nausea, a racing heart,
stomach upset, aching muscles, fatigue, numbness, restlessness,
or insomnia. In the circular grip of chronic anxiety, fear of the
next episode becomes yet another source of anxiety. People cannot
usually just will themselves out of this condition, however strong
their desire.
Helping people suffering with anxiety disorders has been one of
psychotherapy’s partial success stories. Exposure therapy,
stress inoculation therapy, and EMDR (eye-movement desensitization
and reprocessing therapy) are on a list, generated by the American
Psychological Association, of “empirically validated treatments”
for PTSD. Phobic patients who can cooperate with a cognitive behavioral
treatment approach and conscientiously comply with back-home assignments
are helped in 65 percent of the cases.5 A 22 to 18-month course
of medication will help panic patients well over half the time,
though relapse rates are estimated to be between 55 percent and
70 percent after the medication is discontinued (6) Combining medication
and cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) increases the durability of
treatment gains (7). A cognitive behavioral approach includes methods
such as shifting breathing patterns at the first sign of panic,
cognitive restructuring to correct for catastrophic misinterpretations
of bodily sensations or events, detailed recording of one’s
thoughts and behaviors along with attempts to shift them, and exposure
to fear-inducing cues while maintaining a state of relaxation in
the body.
Many of these interventions require invasive measures such as medication
or aversion techniques. Others require persistent back-home application.
Even in successful cases, it often requires eight to twelve weeks
of compliance before significant gains are enjoyed. This was the
state of the art when well-publicized claims about “five-minute
phobia cures” with patients who had not responded to other
treatments began to appear in the media. While making dramatic public
claims in lieu of controlled research was not the most auspicious
entry for getting the psychotherapeutic establishment to take an
impartial look, this approach—which has come to be known as
energy psychology or energy-based psychotherapy or simply energy
therapy—is nonetheless rapidly gaining acceptance among growing
numbers of seasoned clinicians (8).
Clinical Trials
The clinical trials in the South American treatment centers were
conducted for the purpose of internal validation of the procedures
as protocols were being developed. When energy psychology methods
were introduced to the clinical team, many questions were raised,
and a decision was made to conduct clinical trials comparing the
new methods with the CBT/medication approach that was already in
place for the treatment of anxiety. These were pilot studies, viewed
as possible precursors for future research, but were not themselves
designed with publication in mind. Specifically, not all the variables
that need to be controlled in robust research were tracked, not
all criteria were defined with rigorous precision, the record-keeping
was relatively informal, and source data were not always maintained.
Nonetheless, the studies all used randomized samples (9), control
groups (10), and double blind assessment (11). The findings were
so striking that they are worth reporting
Over two dozen separate studies were conducted. In the largest of
these (and some of the other studies were sub-sets of this study),
approximately 5,000 patients were randomly assigned to receive CBT
and medication or tapping treatments (12). Approximately 2,500 patients
were in each group, with diagnoses including panic, agoraphobia,
social phobias, specific phobias, obsessive compulsive disorders,
generalized anxiety disorders, PTSD, acute stress disorders, somatoform
disorders, eating disorders, ADHD, and addictive disorders (13).
The study was conducted over a 5½-year period. Patients were
followed by telephone or office interviews at 1 month after treatment,
3 months, 6 months, and 12 months. “Positive clinical responses”
(ranging from complete relief to partial relief to short relief
with relapses) were found in 63 percent of those treated with CBT
and medication and in 90 percent of those treated with tapping techniques.
Complete freedom from symptoms was found in 51 percent and 76 percent,
respectively (14).
The number of sessions required to attain the positive outcomes
also varied between the two approaches. In one of the studies, 96
patients with specific phobias were treated with a conventional
CBT/medication approach and 94 patients with the same diagnosis
were treated using a combination of tapping techniques and an NLP
method called visual-kinesthetic dissociation (the patient mentally
plays a short “film” of the phobic reaction while watching
it from a distance, and then rapidly rewinds and replays it, gradually
entering the film, until a “dissociation” from the triggering
event is effected). Positive results (15) were obtained with 69
percent of the patients treated with CBT/medication within 9 to
20 sessions, with a mean of 15 sessions. Positive results were obtained
with 78 percent of the patients treated with the tapping and dissociation
techniques within 1 to 7 sessions, with a mean of 3 sessions (16)
Standard medications for anxiety (benzodiazepines, including diazepam,
alprazolam, and clonazepan) were given to 30 patients with generalized
anxiety disorder (the three drugs were randomly assigned to subgroups
of 10 patients each). Outcomes were compared with 34 generalized
anxiety disorder patients who received tapping treatment. The medication
group had 70 percent positive responses compared with 78.5
percent for the tapping group. About half the medication patients
suffered from side effects and rebounds upon discontinuing the medication.
There were no side effects in the tapping group, though one patient
had a paradoxical response (increase of anxiety).
Specific elements of the treatment were also investigated. The order
that the points must be stimulated, for instance, was investigated
by treating 60 phobic patients with a standard 5-point protocol
while varying the order in which the points were stimulated with
a second group of 60 phobic patients. Positive clinical responses
for the two groups were 76.6 percent and 71.6 percent, respectively,
showing no significant difference for the order in which the points
were stimulated. In other studies, varying the number of points
that were stimulated, the specific points, and the inclusion of
typical auxiliary interventions such as the “9 Gamut Procedure”
did not result in significant differences between groups, although
diagnosis of which energy points were involved in the problem led
to treatments that had slightly more favorable outcomes. The working
hypothesis of the treatment team at the time of this writing is
that for many disorders, such as specific phobias, wide variations
can be employed in terms of the points that are stimulated and the
specifics of the protocol. For a smaller number of disorders, such
as OCD and generalized social anxiety, precise protocols must be
formulated and adhered to for a favorable clinical response.
In a study comparing tapping with acupuncture needles, 40 panic
patients received tapping treatments on pre-selected acupuncture
points. A group of 38 panic patients received acupuncture stimulation
using needles on the same points. Positive responses were found
for 78.5 percent from the tapping group, 50 percent from the needle
group.
While it must again be emphasized that these were pilot studies,
they lend corroboration to other clinical trials that have yielded
promising results regarding the efficacy of energy-based psychotherapy,
such as those conducted by Sakai et al. (n=714, representing a wide
range of clinical conditions) and Johnson et al. (n=105, all PTSD
victims of ethnic violence in Albania, Kosovo). Both of these studies
were published in the October 2001 issue of the Journal of Clinical
Psychology (17) and their full text, along with that of related
studies, can be downloaded from www.tftrx.com/5ref.html. For an
overview of current research in energy psychology, maintained by
the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology, visit www.EnergyPsychResearch.org.
Indications and Contraindications
The follow-up data on the 29,000 patients coming from the 11 centers
in South America included subjective scores after the termination
of treatment by independent raters. The ratings, based on a scale
of 1 to 5, estimated the effectiveness of the energy interventions
as contrasted with other methods that might have been used (18). The
numbers indicate that the rater believed that the energy interventions
produced:
1. Much better results than expected with other methods.
2. Better results than expected with other methods.
3. Similar results to those expected with other methods.
4. Lesser results than expected with other methods (only use in conjunction
with other therapies).
5. No clinical improvement at all or contraindicated.
It must be emphasized that the following indications and contraindications
for energy therapy are tentative guidelines based largely on the initial
exploratory research and these informal assessments. In addition,
the outcome studies have not been precisely replicated in other settings,
and the degree to which the findings can be generalized is uncertain.
Nonetheless, based upon the use of tapping techniques with a large
and varied clinical population in 11 settings in two countries over
a 14-year period, the following impressions can serve as a preliminary
guide for selecting which clients are good candidates for acupoint
tapping. There is also considerable overlap between these tentative
guidelines and other published reports (19).
Rating of 1—“Much better results than with other methods.” Many
of the categories of anxiety disorder were rated as responding
to energy interventions much better than to other modalities. Among
these are panic disorders with and without agoraphobia, agoraphobia
without history of panic disorder, specific phobias, separation
anxiety
disorders, post-traumatic stress disorders, acute stress disorders,
and mixed anxiety-depressive disorders. Also in this category were
a variety of other emotional problems, including fear, grief, guilt,
anger, shame, jealousy, rejection, painful memories, loneliness,
frustration,
love pain, and procrastination. Tapping techniques also seemed
particularly effective with adjustment disorders, attention deficit
disorders,
elimination disorders, impulse control disorders, and problems
related to abuse or neglect.
Rating of 2—“Better results than with other methods.” Obsessive
compulsive disorders, generalized anxiety disorders, anxiety disorders
due to general medical conditions, social phobias and certain
other specific phobias, such as a phobia of loud noises, were judged
as not responding quite as well to energy interventions as did
other
anxiety disorders, but they were still rated as being more responsive
to an energy approach than they are to other methods. Also in this
category were learning disorders, communication disorders, feeding
and eating disorders of early childhood, tic disorders, selective
mutism, reactive detachment disorders of infancy or early childhood,
somatoform disorders, factitious disorders, sexual dysfunction,
sleep
disorders, and relational problems.
Rating of 3—“Similar to the results expected with other
methods.” Energy interventions seemed to fare about equally
well as other therapies commonly used for mild to moderate reactive
depression, learning skills disorders, motor skills disorders, and
Tourette’s syndrome. Also in this category were substance
abuse-related disorders, substance-induced anxiety disorders, and
eating disorders.
For these conditions, a number of treatment approaches can be effectively
combined to draw upon the strengths of each.
Rating of 4—“Lesser results than expected with other methods.”
The clinicians’ post-treatment ratings suggest that for major
endogenous depression, personality disorders, and dissociative
disorders,
other therapies are superior as the primary treatment approach.
Energy interventions may still be useful when used in an adjunctive
manner.
Rating of 5—“No clinical improvement or contraindicated.”
The clinicians’ ratings of energy therapy with psychotic
disorders, bipolar disorders, delirium, dementia, mental retardation,
and chronic
fatigue indicated no improvement. While anecdotal reports that
people within these diagnostic categories have been helped with
a range of
life problems are numerous, and seasoned healers might find ways
of adapting energy methods to treat the conditions themselves,
the typical
psychotherapist trained only in the rudimentary use of acupoint
stimulation should have special training or understanding for working
with these
populations before applying energy methods.
Other Guidelines. Even though the above guidelines are preliminary
and heuristic, diagnosis is clearly a key indicator of how and when
to bring energy-based psychotherapy into the treatment setting. As
part of the diagnostic work-up, co-morbidities should also be carefully
identified. Their presence will influence the treatment strategy.
Even in cases where energy interventions are not the treatment of
choice, they can be used as a complement to other psychotherapies,
drugs, and medical procedures. In these cases, it is useful to orient
them around well-defined emotional issues and it is critical to keep
other treatment team members informed about the energy treatment and
its purpose. While interventions that tap acupuncture points appear
to be effective in alleviating a wide range of physical disorders,
much as acupuncture with needles can be applied to illnesses ranging
from allergies to cancer, strong caution must be used when addressing
physical diseases or undiagnosed pain. Medical examinations and the
participation of medical personnel is indicated when addressing serious
conditions or symptoms that might prove to be the first evidence of
a serious condition. Among the hazards: tapping acupoints may bring
about subjective improvement that ultimately wastes life-saving time.
Joseph Wolpe’s Seminal Contribution to Energy Psychology
When Joseph Wolpe developed systematic desensitization in the
1950s, he provided the next several generations of clinicians
their most
potent single non-pharmacological tool for countering severe
anxiety conditions. Patients were taught how to relax each
of the body’s
major muscle groups. With the muscle groups relaxed, they would
bring to mind a thought or image that evoked an item from
the bottom
of a hierarchy of anxiety-provoking situations they had prepared
earlier. They would learn to shift the focus between holding
the
thought or image and relaxing the muscle groups until the thought
or image was progressively associated with a relaxed response.
They
would then systematically move up the hierarchy, reconditioning
the response to each thought or image by replacing the
anxious or
fearful response with a relaxed response.
This process is the closest cousin energy therapy has among traditional
psychotherapeutic modalities. Both modalities bring a problematic
emotion to mind and introduce a physical procedure that neutralizes
the emotion. But energy therapy also has a much older relative,
whose lineage substantially expands the range of problems that may
be addressed and the precision with which they may be targeted.
That progenitor is the practice of acupuncture.
Rather than to relax the muscle tension associated with anxiety
or fear, energy therapy corrects for a disturbed pattern in the
specific energy pathways or meridians that are affected when
the
client is mentally engaged with a problematic situation. For
this reason, one of the strengths of energy-based psychotherapy
is the
range of emotional conditions with which it is effective. Each
of the body’s major energy pathways is believed to be associated
with specific emotions and themes. A stimulus that brings a meridian
out of harmony or balance (while this is a complex concept, terms
such as underenergy, overenergy, and stagnant energy might each
apply) also activates the emotion associated with that meridian.
The treatment pairs the stimulus with an energy intervention that
rebalances the meridian, bringing it back into coherence and harmony
with the body’s overall energy system. A disturbed meridian
response is replaced by an undisturbed response. Just as deep
muscle
relaxation can neutralize a specific fear in systematic desensitization,
calming a disturbed meridian can disengage the emotional reaction
associated with that meridian.
It is because of the wide spectrum of emotions that are governed
by the meridian system (20) that tapping interventions have a
greater
power and applicability than systematic desensitization. Systematic
desensitization can neutralize anxiety-based responses by countering
them with deep muscle relaxation, but that is the only key on
its
keyboard. Interventions capable of restoring balance to any of
the major meridians can address the entire scale of human emotions,
from anxiety and fear to anger, grief, guilt, jealousy, over-attachment,
self-judgment, worry, sadness, and shame. Note the spectrum of
problematic
emotions for which the raters in the South American studies found
energy interventions to produce “much better results than
other methods.” These impressions are corroborated by reports
from practitioners in numerous other settings who have been impressed
by the speed with which a wide range of problematic emotions
can
be overcome by using energy interventions (21).
Possible Mechanisms
While a framework that links specific emotions with specific energy
pathways requires a paradigm-leap for most Western psychotherapists,
the hypothesis is central to traditional Chinese medicine, a 5,000-year-old
method that is currently the most widely practiced medical approach
on the planet. Its venerable though sometimes quaint concepts are
now being blended with modern scientific understanding and empirical
validation, and an approach is developing that holds great promise
for Western medicine as well as for psychotherapy.
The most controversial idea that emerges for psychotherapy is that
the body is surrounded and permeated by an energy field which carries
information (22). Disturbances in this energy field are said to
be reflected in emotional disturbances. The concept of energy fields
carrying information that impacts biological and psychological functioning
is appearing independently in the writings of scientists from numerous
disciplines, ranging from neurology to anesthesiology, from physics
to engineering, and from physiology to medicine (23). In energy
psychology, this two-part formulation, in which biochemistry and
invisible physical fields are believed to be working in tandem,
has been used to explain the rapid changes that are often witnessed
in long-standing emotional patterns. Changes in the energy field
are understood as having the power to shift the organization of
electrochemical processes.
Many of the electrochemical processes that are probably involved
have been mapped (24). When a person thinks about an emotional
problem,
activation signals can be registered by various brain-imaging
techniques at the amygdala, hippocampus, orbital frontal cortex,
and several
other central nervous system structures. When tapping is simultaneously
introduced, the receptors that are sensitive to pressure on the
skin send an afferent signal, regulated by the calcium ion, through
the medial lemniscus, that reaches the parietal cortex and from
there is directed to other cortical and limbic regions. The interaction
of these signals appears to cause a shift in the biochemical
foundations
of the problem.25 One hypothesis is that the signal sent by tapping “collides” with the signal produced by thinking about
the problem, introducing “noise” into the emotional
process, which alters its nature and its capacity to produce
symptoms.
Enhanced serotonin secretion also correlates with tapping specific
points.
Whether serotonin, the calcium ion, or the energy field (or some
combination) is the primary player in the sequence by which tapping
reconditions disturbed emotional responses to thoughts, memories,
and events, early clinical trials suggest that easily replicated
procedures seem to yield results that are more favorable than other
therapies for a range of clinical conditions. Based on the preliminary
findings in the South American treatment centers, new and more rigorous
studies by the same team are planned or underway. Many are designed
to corroborate the informal findings reported in this paper. Others
will investigate new protocols for patients who have not responded
well to more standardized energy interventions. Others will focus
on the neurological correlates of energy interventions, using LORETA
tomography and other brain imaging devices. While much more investigation
is still needed to understand and validate an energy approach, early
indications are quite promising.
Notes
1 “Energy psychology," "energy-based psychotherapy,"
and "energy therapy" all refer to the therapeutic
modality represented, for instance, by the Association for
Comprehensive
Energy Psychology. Earlier therapeutic modalities within psychology
and psychiatry that focus on the body's energy systems extend
back
at least to Wilhelm Reich and are seen in contemporary practices
such as bioenergetics and Gestalt therapy.
2 The initial group included 22 therapists. Of the 36
clinicians to eventually participate in the studies over
the 14-year period,
23 were physicians (anxiety is typically treated by the primary
care physician in Argentina and Uruguay; 5 of the 23 physicians
were psychiatrists), 8 were “clinical psychologists” (in
both countries, the use of this title requires the equivalent
of a masters degree, substantial supervised clinical experience,
and specialized credentials as a clinical psychologist),
3 were mental health counselors, and 2 were RNs. All of them
had extended
experience treating or assisting in the treatment of anxiety
disorders.
Their experience with energy psychology methods ranged from
six months in the initial phases of the clinical trials to
some who
by the end had been using energy techniques for 14 years.
Most were
initially trained in Thought Field Therapy and later incorporated
related techniques, generally customizing their approach
as they gained experience. During the fourteen years, some
of the 36
therapists
were on staff the entire period, some on the initial team
left, others came onto the team while the clinical trials
were underway.
3 Various assessment instruments were used over the course
of the 14 years. However, in each clinical trial, the assessment
methods were standardized. Careful clinical interviews were always
taken, physical exams were given when indicated, and interview data
were supplemented by scores from assessment instruments such as
the Beck Anxiety Inventory, the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety
Index, SPIN for social phobias, and the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive
Scale for OCD. The most objective assessment tool that was used
involved pre- and post-treatment functional brain imaging (computerized
EEG, evoked potentials, and topographic mapping).
4 Anxiety disorders were defined as including panic disorders,
post-traumatic stress disorders, specific phobias, social phobias,
obsessive-compulsive disorders, and generalized anxiety disorders.
5 From the website of the American Psychiatric Association,
www.psych.org, specifically http://www.psych.org/public_info/anxiety_day.cfm#1#1.
6 http://www.psych.org/clin_res/pg_panic_1.cfm
7 http://www.psych.org/public_info/anxiety_day.cfm#1#1.
8 While we do not know of formal studies supporting this
claim, it is a widely held impression among practitioners, and it
is backed by an emerging clinical literature typified, for instance,
by the Energy Psychology Series launched by Norton Professional
Books.
9 Over the 14 years, a series of randomization methods
were used for assigning patients to a treatment group or a control
group. Simple randomization tables were used initially; increasingly
sophisticated randomization software was subsequently introduced.
10 Because the conventional treatment for anxiety—cognitive
behavior therapy (CBT) plus medication—was
already being used at the point the energy
interventions were introduced to
the clinical
staffs, patients were randomly assigned for
conventional CBT/medication treatment (which
constituted the control group) or for energy-based
treatment (which constituted the experimental group).
11 The raters assessing the patient’s progress at
the close of therapy and in the follow-up interviews were clinicians
who were not involved in the patient’s treatment and were
not aware of which treatment protocol had been administered. Both
the patients and the raters were instructed not to discuss with
one another the therapy procedures that had been used. The raters
were given a close variant of the following instructions: “This
patient was diagnosed with [detailed diagnosis, symptoms, and severity
of the disorder as judged at intake] and a course of a given treatment
was applied. Please assess if the patient is now asymptomatic, shows
partial remission, or had no clinical response.” Psychological
testing and brain mapping were administered by still other individuals
who were neither the patient’s clinician nor rater.
12 The clinicians were generally proficient in both CBT
and energy methods. A team approach was used in which non-medical
therapists worked with physicians who prescribed medications for
the CBT patients. Patients receiving energy treatments did not receive
medication. There was advance agreement among the clinical staff
about the nature of CBT and about the kinds of tapping protocols
that would be used with any specific subset of patients. The same
clinician might provide CBT for one patient and an energy approach
for another, but the two approaches were not mixed.
13 In addition to clinical interviews and physical exams
where indicated, the clinician would order specific assessment instruments
that were judged as being most appropriate for measuring subsequent
treatment gains based on the initial diagnosis. The Beck Anxiety
Inventory was given to approximately 60% of these patients, but
other scales, such as SPIN for social phobias or the Yale-Brown
Scale for OCD were administered instead when these diagnoses were
suspected based on the intake interview.
14 Clinical outcomes were assessed based upon interviews
conducted by raters who were not involved in the therapy, as described
in footnote 10. These assessments were then compared with the pre-
and post-treatment test scores and the pre- and post-treatment digitized
brain mappings. Brain mapping was done in approximately 95% of the
patients. Functional brain imaging was done with approximately 95%
of the patients and can identify, for instance, excessive beta frequencies
in the prefrontal and temporal regions, which is a typical profile
of anxiety. Most recently, LORETA tomographies were introduced,
allowing the identification of dysfunction in deeper structures,
such as the amygdala and locus ceruleus.
While this aspect of the study could and will be the basis
of future reports, in brief, the brain mapping correlated with other
measures of improvement, specifically the psychological test data
and the conclusions reached by the raters. The patients assessed
as showing the greatest improvement also showed the largest reduction
of beta frequencies. Interestingly, on 12-month follow-up, these
beta frequency improvements not only persisted, they became more
pronounced.
15 Results in this sub-study were assessed as above. The
number of sessions was determined by mutual agreement between the
therapist and the patient that further treatment was not indicated.
16 While in this particular sub-study the addition of the
NLP technique may have skewed the results in favor of the tapping
techniques, the overall findings with the 29,000 patients suggest
that similar results are gained without the inclusion of the NLP
technique.
17 While these articles were published along with scathing
editorial critiques of the
assessment techniques, case selection, data analysis, and overall
design, others have found that despite
these flaws, they are “fascinating preliminary reports from
a clinical standpoint” (Hartung,
J., and Galvin, M. Energy Psychology
and EMDR: Combining Forces
to Optimize Treatment.
New
York: Norton, 2003, p. 59).
18 While subjective ratings of this nature certainly fall
short of being established assessment instruments, the purpose of
the ratings was to help the South American clinics generate guidelines
for the use of energy interventions. The staff reports that these
guidelines have proven administratively useful and clinically trustworthy,
although the degree that they might generalize to other settings
is unknown.
19 Hartung & Galvin, op. cit. 16, pp. 31 - 33.
20 In the time-honored and strikingly sophisticated “five
element theory” of traditional Chinese medicine (known as
wu zing and probably conceived around 400 B.C.), each of five basic
“elements” is associated with a primary impulse or rhythm
found in nature (represented by the metaphors of water, wood, fire,
earth, and metal). These impulses (a more precise translation than
elements is “phases in dynamic motion”)
have two distinct varieties,
one being more active
and outwardly focused
(yang), the
other being more passive
and inwardly focused
(yin). Each of
twelve major energy pathways
or meridians is associated
with one of these
primary impulses in its more active or more passive state.
The characteristics of each meridian and its functions
reflect the characteristics of its element. When an imbalance
arises
in the energies of a meridian, this may be a precursor to physical
illness related to the meridian’s element and function, but
it is also often expressed more immediately through the activation
of a specific emotion. For instance, the “water element” meridians,
not surprisingly, are kidney and bladder. The emotions that are
associated with water element fall along the continuum
from fear to intelligent caution. Imbalances in the kidney meridian,
which is the yin aspect of water element, lead to an internal
fearful
state. Imbalances in the bladder meridian, which is the yang
aspect of water element, lead more to reactive fears as events
unfold.
Each meridian governs a specific emotion derived from
its element and energetic (active or passive). While the form
and expression
of that emotional impulse may vary considerably as it interacts
with the many other factors making up a human personality, the
basic
relationship that is of concern within energy psychology is that
a disturbance in a meridian’s energies tends to evoke a
specific emotion. Treating the energy disturbance deactivates
the emotion.
For a list of the emotions associated with each meridian,
in both its balanced and reactive states, see the “Meridian
Emotions and Affirmations” table on the CD. For further discussion
of “five element” theory, see Chapter 7 of Donna Eden’s
Energy Medicine (New York: Tarcher/Penguin Putnam, 1999).
21 This statement is based on informal interviews with
over 30 practitioners
of energy psychology, including many of the
field’s recognized
pioneers and leaders,
conducted by the second
author while developing
the Energy Psychology
Interactive
program.
22 Feinstein, D. Energy: Psychology’s Missing Link.
Paper submitted for publication.
23 References can be found in David Feinstein’s
At Play in the Fields
of the Mind, Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1988, 38(3): 71-109.
The entire text of this article is on the
CD.
24 See, for instance, Kerry H. Levin and Hans O. Luder’s
Comprehensive Clinical
Neurophysiology (London: W B Saunders, 2000).
25 One of the unsolved puzzles within energy psychology
is the observation that different tapping practitioners, using different
techniques, points, and methodologies, get similarly strong results
with most anxiety disorders. This impression was corroborated in
the comparison studies conducted in South America. What is the underlying
mechanism that accounts for the positive outcomes being witnessed
regardless of how the components of the approach were mixed and
matched? The proponents of the various approaches tend to claim
that the strong results they report are a function of the specifics
of their particular technique. The common element for all of them,
however, is that they stimulate mechanoreceptors in different parts
of the body.
Mechanoreceptors are specialized receptors that respond
to mechanical forces such as tapping, massaging, or holding.
Among
their types: Meissner corpuscles, Pacini corpuscles, Merkel discs,
and Ruffini corpuscles. They are sensitive to stimulation on
the
surface of the skin anywhere on the body. The acupuncture points,
called hsue in traditional Chinese medicine (“hollow”
rather than “point” is actually the correct translation
from the Mandarin), are loci that have a particularly high concentration
of mechanoreceptors, free nerve endings, and neurovascular density.
The signals that are initiated when tapping hsue travel as afferent
stimuli that are capable of reaching the cortex, the amygdala,
and
the hippocampus.
So a possible explanation for the puzzle of why stimulating
different points yields the same results involves the simple
fact
that mechanoreceptors are distributed all over the skin surface.
Regardless of where you tap, you are likely to stimulate mechanoreceptors.
The signal that is generated travels via large myelinated fibers,
ascends ipsilaterally through the medial lemniscus, and triggers
the somato-sensory cortex at the parietal lobes and the prefrontal
cortex. From there, the signal reaches the amygdala, hippocampus,
and other structures where the emotional problem has neurological
entity, and the signal apparently disrupts established patterns.
In theory, you can tap anywhere and impact emotional problems.
Non-hsue
skin areas, or "sham points," also have mechanoreceptors.
But because they are not as dense as in hsue, the effect of tapping
them is not as intense. Also, since different hsue send convergent
signals that can release one or more neurotransmitters, the same
effects may be obtained from stimulating different points.
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