More Yoga, Fewer Doctor Visits

Author: Alex Lindley

If you’re sick of doctors’ office waiting rooms (or just being sick), you may want to give yoga a try.

Yoga’s no cure-all, and it’s certainly no replacement for a doctor if you’re ill, but a recent study found that patients who practiced deep relaxation techniques — like yoga, meditation or prayer — went to the doctor less frequently than they had before they started using these techniques.

“Meditation and yoga reduce stress, which in turn promotes wellness, which in turn reduces seeking and using healthcare resources,” said lead study author Dr. James Stahl, director of the Institute for Technology Assessment at Massachusetts General Hospital, in an interview with Reuters.

That’s one theory, but it’s also worth remembering that all this study found was a link — more deep relaxation meant less time spent at the doctor’s office — but that doesn’t mean that one factor caused the other.

Still, it’s a promising theory that adds to an ever-growing body of evidence for the health benefits of practices like yoga and meditation. Past research has linked yoga to improved heart health and decreased chronic pain, blood pressure, stress and anxiety.

For the current study, Dr. Stahl and colleagues looked at 4,452 patients who were taught “relaxation response training” at the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. These researchers studied how often the patients used health services before and after receiving the deep relaxation training. Compared to the year before, the year after showed a 43 percent drop in patient use of health services.

Dr. Stahl and team also compared these patients to another group of 13,149 patients who did not learn relaxation techniques. That group’s health care use patterns showed little change from one year to the next.

Source : DailyRx

 

Leave a Comment

Notice : The source URLs cited in the news/article might be only valid on the date the news/article was published. Most of them may become invalid from a day to a few months later. When a URL fails to work, you may go to the top level of the sources website and search for the news/article.

Disclaimer : The news/article published are collected from various sources and responsibility of news/article lies solely on the source itself. Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS) or its website is not in anyway connected nor it is responsible for the news/article content presented here. ​Opinions expressed in this article are the authors personal opinions. Information, facts or opinions shared by the Author do not reflect the views of HJS and HJS is not responsible or liable for the same. The Author is responsible for accuracy, completeness, suitability and validity of any information in this article. ​