Editor—The study by Leibovici is not about reaching back from the future into the past to change it but, instead, affecting the way in which it occurred in the first instance, when these clinical events were present tense.6-1 Neither is this study a singular piece of benighted research, as others seem to suggest. Readers will find several papers addressing various aspects of this subject at www.fourmilab.ch/rpkp/. The work of physicist Helmut Schmidt is of particular interest.
A study carried out by researchers at Duke University's School of Medicine deals with retroactive therapeutic intent.6-2 I think this is a better term than prayer, because the literature on this subject suggests that any form of religious belief, or none at all, seems capable of achieving the effect. Using a well designed randomised, controlled, double blind protocol, the study involves prayers from religious groups around the world for people experiencing severe chest pains who are in danger of imminent heart attacks. The treatments they received to relieve their crisis were cardiac catheterisation and angioplasty. The emergency nature of these treatments means that the procedures are carried out immediately on admission. That turns out to be the crucial aspect of the retroactive aspect of this research into therapeutic intent, because, although the prayer groups were notified as soon as possible after the patient was admitted, the initiation of the actual sessions often began after the medical treatment had already been completed. Both treated and control groups received the same level of medical intervention. The practitioners of therapeutic intent had no contact with the patients or the health professionals administering the treatments, and the patients themselves did not know about the involvement of therapeutic intent. The outcome measure was the number of complications that each patient experienced, with the comparison being made between the subgroups.
The recipients of therapeutic intent experienced a 50-100% reduction in side effects compared with the controls. Although the study population was too small to reach any definitive conclusions, the results have proved so provocative that researchers at more than six medical centres in the United States have taken up this line of inquiry.
The practitioners in the study were scattered all over the world, and their therapeutic intent was expressed through a wide range of religious traditions. No difference was noted concerning one tradition being more powerful or efficacious than any other.
Sceptics may find this line of inquiry philosophically offensive but the gathering corpus of research suggests that therapeutic intent, whether retroactive or in real time, has the power to affect clinical outcome.
References
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6-1.Leibovici L. Effects of remote, retroactive intercessory prayer on outcomes in patients with bloodstream infection: randomised controlled trial. BMJ. 2001;323:1450–1451. doi: 10.1136/bmj.323.7327.1450. . (22 December.) [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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6-2.Krucoff MW, Crater SW, Green CL, Maas AC, Seskevich JE, Lane JD, et al. Integrative noetic therapies as adjuncts to percutaneous intervention during unstable coronary syndromes: monitoring and actualization of noetic training (MANTRA) feasibility pilot. Am Heart J. 2001;142:760–767. doi: 10.1067/mhj.2001.119138. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]