what a novel idea“If we want to use it in the therapeutic context, we actually need to understand the mechanism.”
twaddleSeveral other studies have documented a similar link between survival and the mental states of people with cancer.
I thought the research that purported to show positive thinking therapies improved cancer outcomes had been shown ages ago to be bogus. Other research showed there was no benefit for cancer outcomes from positive thinking.
Can having a positive attitude improve my chance of surviving cancer?
Many people with cancer are told by family and friends to stay positive. But sadness, distress, depression, fear, and anxiety are all normal feelings when learning to deal with cancer. Ignoring these feelings or not talking about them can make the person with cancer feel alone. And this can make it harder for them to cope with how they are feeling .
Studies have shown that keeping a positive attitude does not change the course of a person’s cancer. Trying to keep a positive attitude does not lead to a longer life and can cause some people to feel guilty when they can’t “stay positive.” This only adds to their burden.
"IN MICE"
just to clarify... when i said that I meant that its novel that they actually want to understand the mechanism before using the idea in a theraputic context - in contrast to BPS who have been using their beliefs to harm us for yrs with no evidence for any actual biological mechanism. If theyd waited to understand the mechanism....what a novel idea
C: Because Cowards Get Cancer Too... was adapted into a play by Victoria Coren Mitchell called A Lump In My Throat, which was itself later adapted for television. Diamond's second book, Snake Oil and Other Preoccupations, was edited by his brother-in-law Dominic Lawson, editor of The Sunday Telegraph, and published posthumously (with a foreword by Richard Dawkins).[3] It contained the six chapters of his "uncomplimentary look at the world of complementary medicine" which he had completed before his death, and some of his columns from The Times and The Jewish Chronicle.
How do you establish which part of a mouse brain is associated with positive emotions? Are they fitted with weeny mouse neuroimplants and then shown alternating pictures of cheese and cats?
Literally. If there's one common factor to all psychosomatic ideology, it's not giving a fig about cause, having decided on a different magical cause that needs no evidence as it's just a bunch of stories and ugly prejudice.what a novel idea
How do you establish which part of a mouse brain is associated with positive emotions? Are they fitted with weeny mouse neuroimplants and then shown alternating pictures of cheese and cats?
This actually sounds like a great "treatment" programme to me. Sign me up!!
(Realizing the picture I use for my avatar here just as I am posting)
Good spot, Grigor. Would you consider submitting this as a letter for publication in Nature correspondence? My recollection is that letters for publication in response to comment or feature articles can just be emailed to correspondence@nature.com — much easier than submitting letters in response to published studies. But you would need to look it up.The article seems to be pushing the positive emotion idea, but they also talk about the study by Spiegel et al. from 1989, but in 2007 it failed replication. It's strange that this wasn't mentioned. Quite a biased and harmful piece in my opinion.
https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/cncr.22890
Good spot, Grigor. Would you consider submitting this as a letter for publication in Nature correspondence? My recollection is that letters for publication in response to comment or feature articles can just be emailed to correspondence@nature.com — much easier than submitting letters in response to published studies. But you would need to look it up.
If you’re not up to it, or don’t want to, please let me know and I will consider doing it myself – but will depend how I am over the next few days.
Your English is excellent IMO, but if you would like to send me a pm with a draft (or post on here) I would be very happy to edit it for you. No pressure.I would love to but I don't think my English is good enough to be published anywhere. I did have some additional comments about it as I wrote about cancer research and positivity here as well.
https://anilvanderzee.com/can-positivity-cure-any-disease/
Your English is excellent IMO, but if you would like to send me a pm with a draft (or post on here) I would be very happy to edit it for you. No pressure.
See “correspondence” section for details on letters to the editor: https://www.nature.com/nature/for-authors/other-subs
Summary:
Submit as email
Max 250 words
Max 3 references
Max 3 authors
Include postal address and tel number
love thatI would love to but I don't think my English is good enough to be published anywhere. I did have some additional comments about it as I wrote about cancer research and positivity here as well.
https://anilvanderzee.com/can-positivity-cure-any-disease/