Can
Noetic Science Help You?
Can Prayer Heal? Scientists Suggest Recovery
May Be the Hand of God at Work!
Halfway around the world, American Sufi Muslims join
in. Fundamentalist Christians add their prayers, as do Orthodox
Jews at Jerusalem's Western Wall.
"Jimmy P," a heart patient at Duke University Medical
Center in North Carolina, is part of a global scientific experiment
trying to find out: Does prayer heal?
The experiment was launched by Dr. Mitch Krucoff, a Cardiologist
at Duke University Medical Center.
"If in addition to all the prayer routinely going
on all the time, we were to add prayers from religious groups
all over the world focused on one individual's recovery,
is there a measurable incremental benefit?" he wondered.
So he is putting prayer to the test in a global scientific
study that is scheduled to be completed next year.
Putting Faith to
the Test
In the meantime, other scientists are taking a look at
the 191 studies that have already been done on what they
call "remote healing."
One such study was conducted at the Mid-America Heart
Institute in Kansas City, Mo. At first, Dr. William Harris
had a hard time persuading a fellow cardiologist, Dr. James
O'Keefe, to participate in the prayer experiment on heart
patients.
"From a purely scientific standpoint, I thought it
was illogical," says O'Keefe. "I don't really
think of spirituality normally as playing a role in scientific,
rigorous, double-blind placebo-controlled scientific studies.
It's two different realms."
A previous study by some other scientists had gotten positive
results, and Harris wanted to study remote healing for himself.
But he, too, was skeptical.
"We were even doubtful that the phenomena itself
was real," he says, "that prayer could do anything."
So Harris wanted to make his experiment impervious to any
placebo effects. He did not tell patients they were being
prayed for or even that they were part of any kind
of experiment. For an entire year, about 1,000 heart patients
admitted to the institute's critical care unit were secretly
divided into two groups. Half were prayed for by a group
of volunteers and the hospital's chaplain; the other half
were not.
All the patients were followed for 1-year, and then their
health was scored according to pre-set rules by a 3rd
party who did not know which patients had been prayed for
and which had not. The results: The patients who were prayed
for had 11 percent fewer heart attacks, strokes and life-threatening
complications.
"This study offers an interesting insight into the
possibility that maybe God is influencing our lives on Earth,"
says O'Keefe. "As a scientist, it's very counterintuitive
because I don't have a way to explain it."
A Miracle or Simply
Chance?
Dr. Elizabeth Targ, a psychiatrist at the Pacific College
of Medicine in San Francisco, has also tested out prayer
on critically ill AIDS patients.
All 20 patients in the study got pretty much the same medical
treatment, but only half of them were prayed for by spiritual
healers. Ultimately, 10 of the prayed-for patients lived,
while four who had not been prayed for died.
In a larger follow-up study, Targ found that the people
who received prayer and remote healing had six times fewer
hospitalizations and those hospitalizations were significantly
shorter than the people who received no prayer and distant
healing.
"I was sort of shocked," says Targ. "In
a way it's like witnessing a real life miracle. There was no way to
understand this from my experience and from my basic understanding
of science."

Dr. Deepak Chopra believes "there is a realm of reality
which goes beyond the physical." (ABCNEWS.com)
Dr. Deepak Chopra, who is well-known for his insights on
science and spirituality, says these prayer experiments
are proving what he's been saying all along: There are healing
forces in nature that science is only beginning to understand.
"What physicists are saying to us right now,"
he says, "is that there is a realm of reality which
goes beyond the physical
where in fact we can influence
each other from a distance."
But the final verdict on prayer is still not in, says
Dr. Gary Posner, a skeptic of remote healing who says most
prayer studies to date have been sloppy and untrustworthy.
"I suspect that 50 years from now people looking
back at this genre of prayer research will kind of shake
their heads and call it junk science."
Chance alone, he says, might account for the effect that
they thought was due to the prayer.
But Chopra says he is just glad science is taking the
belief seriously enough to want to study it.
"At the moment, I would agree that some of these
studies are tentative, that we should be cautious in the
way we interpret the results," says Chopra. "But
the studies are encouraging enough so we should pursue
them, because if we don't, we may have missed one of the
most amazing phenomena in nature." Copyright by ABC News.
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