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Efficacy of Distant Healing in Glioblastoma Treatment
This study has been completed.
Study NCT00029783   Information provided by National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
First Received: January 23, 2002   Last Updated: August 17, 2006   History of Changes

January 23, 2002
August 17, 2006
September 2000
 
 
 
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00029783 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
 
 
 
Efficacy of Distant Healing in Glioblastoma Treatment
Efficacy of Distant Healing in Glioblastoma Treatment

This study will assess whether distant healing effects survival time and loss of function for glioblastoma patients.

Prayer, energy healing, and spiritual healing are widely used for all degrees of illness.

Eisenberg (1998) reported that more that 26% of his survey sample used "energy healing" within the last year. Most of these practitioners believe that their inner intentions result in the benefits, either through the agency of love, energy, or a Higher Power (Benor 1992). However, the conventional community attributes benefits from these interventions to the patient's hope, expectation, or experience of support from a practitioner (Benson 1996). The proposed study is a double-blind randomized controlled clinical trial of "distant healing intentionality." Distant Healing (DH) is defined as a "mental intention on behalf of one person, to benefit another at a distance." This study will assess whether DH effects survival time and loss of function for glioblastoma patients under conditions where hope and expectation are controlled. The study will include approximately 150 patients who have rapidly progressing glioblastoma and are beginning radiotherapy. Patients will be photographed and assessed for quality of life, psychological status, and physical symptoms as well as health habits and attitude toward DH. After stratification by age and functional status (Karnofsky score), patients will be randomly assigned to either standard treatment with or without DH. Healers from diverse schools and backgrounds from communities across the United States will be assigned to patients by rotation, so that each patient in the DH group will be treated for two weeks by 10 different healers over the 20 week intervention. Experienced healers will have photographs of subjects and send "mental intention for health and well being" to subjects for one hour daily, three times per week. The healing intervention will be performed at a distance, and patients and healers will never meet, nor will patients know their group assignment. The study findings will provide the basis for developing a larger study, definitive trial.

Phase II
Interventional
Treatment, Randomized
Glioblastoma
Procedure: Distant Healing
 
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Completed
150
June 2005
 

Inclusion:

  • Histologically confirmed diagnosis of glioblastoma based on open resection.
  • Patient is within five weeks of diagnosis confirmed by pathology report.

Exclusion:

  • Non-English speaking.
  • Inability or unwillingness to fill out questionnaires.
  • History of other cancers within the last 2 years (except superficial basal cell, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin), or other concurrent life-threatening conditions.
Both
18 Years to 75 Years
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
United States
 
NCT00029783
 
R01 AT000644-03
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
 
Principal Investigator: Andrew Freinkel, MD California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM)
July 2006

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP