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Losing
Hostility Reduces Blood Pressure and
Heart Risk
Health Psychology
July 1999
Patients with coronary heart disease can lower their blood pressure
and reduce their heart risk by undergoing hostility-reduction intervention.
The study found that in persons who had heart
disease, who were additionally having problems with interpersonal
stress or aggression, that if they went into a group therapy, their
blood pressure as well as their aggression and hostility, both right
after the treatment and 8 weeks later. The degree to which blood
pressure was reduced was equivalent to the reduction in hostility,
and given the design of the study, the researchers speculate that
hostility might play a causal role in blood pressure. Since blood
pressure is a risk factor for heart disease, the authors noted that
this study lends itself to further investigation into the role hostility
plays in coronary heart disease.
COMMENT:
Hostility will activate the autonomic nervous system and release
adrenaline. Adrenaline is one of the most potent oxidant stresses
known to man. Without adrenaline, we would be in sorry shape. However,
most of us have far too much. Strategies that help resolve the neuro-emotional
connections that allow one to react in a hostile way are enormously
beneficial for optimized health.
It is likely that one's inability to respond
properly to stress causes more heart attacks than high cholesterol
levels and smoking combined.
There are many strategies one can employ.
Aerobic exercise is a simple intervention that most can employ.
Prayer is probably the most powerful strategy.
A medical technique that appears particularly
effective is Neuro Emotional Technique. It was developed by a chiropractor,
Dr. Scott Walker. A revision of this technique is called Psycho
Kinesiology (PK). It appears to be one of the most powerful clinical
healing interventions today.
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