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BSCAH is a society made up of healthcare professionals, for healthcare professionals who have an interest in, or use hypnotic techniques within their clinical work. BSCAH provides a safe platorm for which the practice of clinical hypnosis and communication techniques can be explored. BSCAH has been teaching clinical hypnosis to our healthcare colleagues for decades. You can read more about BSCAH here

Our members have access to numerous presentations and resources. If you are a member please login and go to “Clinical Hypnosis Resources” for further resources. If you wish to join BSCAH click here 

Please find below a selection of recent research and some articles written by our members on the application of hypnotic techniques in the management of a variety of clinical conditions that might be of interest:

BSCAH's therapists are all healthcare professionals and have donated FREE AUDIO DOWNLOADS for anyone needing help to cope in these potentially stressful circumstances.

The content in these audio recordings are NOT meant to replace medical or psychological treatment or consultation. Always continue to consult with your doctor regarding the management of your health problem or condition. Under no circumstances must you cease taking prescribed medication without your doctor's approval. Do not listen to hypnosis recordings whilst driving or operating machinery. The content of each recording has been chosen by a number of our practitioners, based on their extensive clinical experience.

These audio recordings will help you to become more physically relaxed and mentally calm. They utilise various forms of imagery to help focus your attention and give positive suggestion. Self-hypnosis is a natural state similar to daydreaming, or getting lost in a good book. This relaxed state is good for both physical and mental health, improves your immune system and helps you to recharge. Self-hypnosis can be done as often as you like; as with any skill it gets easier and quicker to do with practise, and after a while you may well find you no longer need to listen to the audio recording to enter a deeply relaxed state.

  • It is important NOT to listen to these when driving or in any other situation that requires your full attention.
  • If you have some active significant mental health issues please discuss with your doctor/counsellor/psychologist whether these recordings would be appropriate for you
  • However relaxed you become, using these audios, part of you will remain alert and you will be able to stop at any time if there is an emergency that requires your attention and deal with it appropriately
  • You may find you are very good at visualisation but just having some awareness of the imagery used is absolutely fine and works just as well
  • If your mind wanders whilst you are listening, just gently focus back on the recording when you notice this, and don’t beat yourself up about it – it’s just what minds do
  • Self-hypnosis is a ‘being’ state, you don’t have to try and do anything..Just listen and allow yourself to become curious......

For further information about hypnosis click here: Hypnosis & FAQ

FREE AUDIO DOWNLOADS   

You can download these audio recordings by right clicking on the three dots or the volume icon to the right of the play bar and selecting download or save audio as....

(The scripts for some audios are available to health professionals on application to BSCAH National Office natoffice@bscah.co.uk)

If you are a health professional you can find extra resources here

These audio recordings are suitable for use in ICU or ED areas for ventilated patients or patients on CPAP/face mask oxygen. It is hoped that, by listening to this audio, the patient will recover faster, need less sedation and generally have a better experience so reducing the incidence of post-traumatic stress.

They can be downloaded to an MP3 player or tablet and then left to play to patients via headphones or earbuds.

We suggest that they should be played three or more times a day.
Ensure the volume is high enough to overcome any ambient noise.

  • Hypnosis is an excellent way of helping patients relax
  • It can help patients stay in control in stressful situations
  • It is extremely safe

If you are a BSCAH member please access these recordings from the Members Area.
If you are not a BSCAH member then please contact natoffice@bscah.co.uk
  who will advise.

……………………………………

Hypnosis is a natural daydreamy state, a little like meditation, that results from a focusing of attention and use of imagination. When in this state suggestions are more effective and have been shown to have a marked effect on physiology. When a patient is highly anxious or sedated, they are in a semi-hypnotic state already, and this can be utilised to give positive suggestions that can aid recovery.

We know that even heavily sedated patients are aware of sounds around them and also that a large percentage of patients who have been in ICU suffer from post-traumatic stress afterwards. Studies have shown that ventilation time and sedation may be reduced following positive suggestion given via MP3 player.

There are many positive suggestions that can be used while working with your patients. Here are a few of them:

  1. All the sounds and noises you may become aware of just mean that you are being cared for... being kept safe
  2. You are being watched over and cared for... we will look after you - you have nothing to do except focus on your healing
  3. You can trust us to take good care of you and each time you hear our voices you can feel comforted and stronger
  4. You need hear only those things that are helpful to you
  5. As you hear the noises around you, they can just help you to feel more relaxed

If you have been suffering from overwhelming distress, nightmares, anxiety, or flashbacks following your stay in ICU or hospital with Covid 19, then our free self-help audios ‘Resolving Trauma’ might be helpful if you are unable to access face to face counselling. If you wish to avail yourself of this offer please contact our National Office (natoffice@bscah.co.uk) and one of our members will be in touch to see if it would be suitable for you.

Some information about the ‘Resolving Trauma’ podcast

This podcast gives an explanation of post-traumatic stress and how symptoms may arise. It also uses metaphorical imagery to access calm and help resolve the traumatic feelings. There are also recordings of general approaches including ways to express negative feelings safely, connecting with how you want to feel, and managing feelings of anger and guilt. One recording gives information about self-hypnosis and there is also a five-minute breathing self-hypnotic exercise and a longer self-hypnosis with special place imagery and positive suggestion.

Management of the psychological effects of emerging virus outbreaks on healthcare workers

Psychological Effects of COVID (002) written by BSCAH member Dr Mike Capek

 

The use of hypnosis in psychosomatic or functional disorders

Dr Jason Price has produced an article in Neurodigest outlining his experiences using Clincial hypnosis for Fuctional Neurological Disorders. (General Neuropsychology assessment & intervention. Clinical Lead for Stroke and Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder. Chair, Policy Unit (Division of Neuropsychology; BPS). Chair, UKFNFORUM, British Neuropsychiatry Association; member American Neuropsychiatry Committee on Research; Motivational Interviewing Trainer for healthcare professionals with proven track record in meeting CQUIN targets. Therapeutic specialist interests in Psychodynamic psychotherapy, EMDR, Clinical Hypnosis, Motivational Interviewing and ACT.)

Hypnosis can be seen as ‘a waking state of awareness, (or consciousness), in which a person’s attention is detached from his or her immediate environment and is absorbed by inner experiences such as feelings, cognition and imagery’.1 Hypnotic induction involves focusing of attention and imaginative involvement to the point where what is being imagined feels real. By the use and acceptance of suggestions, the clinician and patient construct a hypnotic reality.

Everyday ‘trance’ states are part of our common human experience, such as getting lost in a good book, driving down a familiar stretch of road with no conscious recollection, when in prayer or meditation, or when undertaking a monotonous or a creative activity. Our conscious awareness of our surroundings versus an inner awareness is on a continuum, so that, when in these states, one’s focus is predominantly internal, but one does not necessarily lose all outer awareness.

Hypnosis could be seen as a meditative state, which one can learn to access consciously and deliberately, for a therapeutic purpose. Suggestions are then given either verbally or using imagery, directed at the desired outcome. This might be to allay anxiety by accessing calmness and relaxation, help manage side effects of medications, or help ease pain or other symptoms. Depending on the suggestions given, hypnosis is usually a relaxing experience, which can be very useful with a patient who is tense or anxious. However, the main usefulness of the hypnotic state is the increased effectiveness of suggestion and access to mind/body links or unconscious processing. Hypnosis can not only be used to reduce emotional distress but also may have a direct effect on the patient’s experience of pain.2

Hypnosis in itself is not a therapy, but it can be a tool that facilitates the delivery of therapy in the same way as a syringe delivers drugs. Hypnosis does not make the impossible possible, but can help patients believe and experience what might be possible for them to achieve.

Hypnotic states have been used for healing since humankind has existed, but because hypnosis can be misused for so-called entertainment and has been portrayed in the media as something mysterious and magical, supposedly out of the hypnotic subject’s control, it has been viewed with distrust and scepticism by many health professionals. However, recent advances in neuroscience have enabled us to begin to understand what might be happening when someone enters a hypnotic state,3–8 and evidence is building for the use of hypnosis as a useful tool to help patients and health professionals manage a variety of conditions, especially anxiety and pain.

Landry and colleagues9 and Jensen and Patterson10 give good and comprehensive information on recent research into the neural correlates of hypnosis. The study of hypnosis is complex and many factors such as context, expectation and personality affect hypnotic response as well as the suggestions used.

As clinicians, we know that simply knowing something cognitively does not necessarily translate into being able to control emotions such as fear and anxiety. A simple ‘model’ that can be used to help patients understand that this is quite a usual response is that of right/left brain, which can also correlate with conscious/unconscious and intellectual/emotional processing.

From the diagram, it can be seen that to communicate effectively to both types of our processing, we need more than words; we need to use words that evoke imagery. It is no surprise, therefore, that all the greatest teachers use metaphor, parable and story to convey their teachings.

The brain has two cerebral hemispheres, and while in our normal waking state, the left brain tends to be more dominant and could be likened to our ‘conscious mind’. This communicates verbally and is the more intellectual, conscious and rational part of ourselves. When we relax or become deeply involved in some activity, our right brain becomes more dominant. The right brain could be seen to be the more emotional, creative part of ourselves that communicates with symbols and images, and could be seen as our ‘unconscious mind’. There is always a difficulty in telling ourselves not to be upset or anxious because words are not the language of the right brain. But one can paint a word picture using guided imagery or metaphor.

While this description may oversimplify the neural processing of the left and right hemispheres, it is a useful way to explain hypnosis to patients.

Neuroimaging research has demonstrated that subjective changes in response to suggestion are associated with corresponding changes in brain regions related to the specific psychological function in question.11,12 When someone imagines something in hypnosis (colour, sound, physical activity and pain), recent neuroscience findings show us that similar areas of the brain are activated as when the person has that experience in reality. Derbyshire and colleagues13 showed that both physically induced and hypnotically induced pain are accompanied by activations in areas associated with the classic ‘pain matrix’. Similar findings have been shown with visual and auditory suggestions.14,15

When patients are highly anxious, they are operating at an emotional, rather than cognitive level, and one can engage and direct their creative imagination towards what is useful for them. Anxious patients are using their imagination to create possible catastrophic scenarios, which generates even more anxiety and hence more adrenaline, which can then spiral into panic.

Patients may feel that they are being overwhelmed by their emotions, but if the health professionals can engage their attention, direct their imagination to feeling calm or to re-experience some positive past experience or activity and give positive suggestions, then the patients will start to feel calmer and more able to cope.

To enter hypnosis, one needs to focus attention (this is done during a hypnotic induction), and there are many ways to achieve this. A candle flame or a computer screen could be a visual focus. An auditory focus could be music, chanting or using mantras. Induction could be mainly kinaesthetic, such as in progressive muscular relaxation (PMR) or could use ‘involuntary’ (or ideomotor) movement. One of the simplest methods is to engage the patient’s imagination using revivification (or re-experiencing) of an experience, a daydream or fantasy. Hypnosis can be used formally in a therapeutic session or informally in conversation by directing the patient’s focus and engaging their imagination.

Patients can then be taught self-hypnosis, which means they can enter this state deliberately at will, to utilise imagery and suggestion to help themselves.16 In the clinical setting, the health professional wants to avoid dependence and save time and money, and studies have shown that hypnotic interventions can be very cost-effective.17 Montgomery and colleagues18 randomised control trial of 200 breast cancer patients using a 15-min session of hypnosis or structured attention to control side effects after surgery also showed reduced medical costs with the hypnosis intervention.

There is a strong case for more research in the field of hypnosis in palliative care, where mind-body interventions are increasingly accepted as part of comprehensive excellent cancer care (even in large cancer centres that once focused only on drug trials).

Hypnosis research takes place in laboratory conditions and usually compares results between ‘highs’ and ‘lows’; in other words, those who are highly hypnotisable and those who are not. It has been shown that hypnotisability is a genetic trait and follows a Gaussian or bell-shaped distribution, so most research into hypnotic responding focuses on 10% of the population. In the clinical context, we have to work with everyone, and even if hypnosis is not used in a formal way, it can inform one’s approach to the patient and the language used. For experimental purposes, the procedure must be standardised and all variables controlled as much as possible. In the clinical context, hypnosis is tailored to the individual patient and their responses, and the motivation is very different from the laboratory situation.

Although there is increasing evidence for the usefulness and cost-effectiveness of using hypnosis in a wide variety of conditions, it is difficult to get funding for hypnosis because of a shortage of randomised control trial support (the gold standard so beloved of Trusts, CCGs, research funders and all clinical trialists). In a Catch-22 situation, one of the major difficulties in undertaking any hypnosis research in the United Kingdom is lack of funding. One major factor in this is the World Health Organization classification of hypnosis as a ‘Complementary Therapy’. This puts hypnosis in the same category as various other approaches of dubious scientific credibility and effectively bars researchers into hypnosis obtaining funding. Also, much hypnosis is done by individual clinicians in a private practice, a community setting or as an individual in a department.

There is no statutory regulation of hypnosis training or practice in the United Kingdom, and many organisations offer training, which may be of varying quality.

There are three professional bodies in the United Kingdom, the Hypnosis and Psychosomatic Section of the Royal Society of Medicine, the British Society of Medical & Dental Hypnosis (Scotland) for doctors and dentists and the British Society of Clinical & Academic Hypnosis (BSCAH), which consist entirely of qualified health professionals [mostly working within the National Health Service (NHS)]. The British Society of Clinical & Academic Hypnosis (www.bscah.com) runs training courses in hypnosis for health professionals that range from 1-day introductory workshops for different specialties, through a 6-day foundation training, which equips one to utilise hypnotic techniques within one’s field of expertise, to a fully accredited University Diploma with City of Birmingham University.

BSMDH (Scotland) and BSCAH are also constituent members of the European and International Societies of Hypnosis. The European Society of Hypnosis (www.esh-hypnosis.eu) consists of 41 Constituent Societies in 20 countries throughout Europe, with over 14,800 members from the fields of Medicine, Dentistry, Psychology and allied health care professions. The International Society for Hypnosis (ISH; www.ishhypnosis.org) is the world headquarters for researchers and clinicians interested in hypnosis. ISH serves as the umbrella and meeting place for its members and 33 (still growing) Constituent Societies from around the world.

If, as clinicians, we want to prove the effectiveness of hypnosis, then we need to show that the degree of improvement and speed of achieving this is enhanced by hypnosis. We need practice-based evidence. One way of doing this is to compare results obtained by those using hypnosis with those of people who do not use hypnosis. If large numbers of us were to use a simple questionnaire, both at the start and end of our work, and pool our results centrally, then this would provide a large amount of data that could go some way to resolving this. The proposed questionnaire would be MYMOP (Measure Your Own Medical Outcome Protocol: http://www.bris.ac.uk/primaryhealthcare/resources/mymop/).

The BSCAH is trying to facilitate and support this project; so, if you are interested please contact us. For any technical queries, you can contact Dr Peter Naish at p.naish@open.ac.uk.

Funding
The author received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

Conflict of interest statement
The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.

References
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2. Jensen, MP, Patterson, D. Hypnotic approaches for chronic pain management: clinical implications of recent research findings. Am Psychol 2014; 69: 167–177. Google Scholar

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This video illustrates the major times of a hypnosedation procedure for awake surgery of a low-grade glioma.

Here is an article on the history of hypnosis by one of our members