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US Experts Probe Link Between Emotions
And Health
Will Dunham
Reuters March
27, 2001
BETHESDA, Md. (Reuters) - Medical experts gathered on Monday
at the US National Institutes of Health, the very embodiment of
the medical establishment, to discuss a concept once derided as
New Age fluff--how emotions shape human health and disease.
Leading researchers in medicine, neuroscience, microbiology,
psychology and social sciences took part in a groundbreaking conference
on the mind-body interaction. But rather than dwell on pop culture
self-help themes, they examined the precise physiological mechanisms
involved in linking a person's mental state to physical health.
"What has happened is that this field has suddenly become
mainstream. Certainly five years ago, certainly 10 years ago, it
was considered New Age," Dr. Esther Sternberg of the NIH's
National Institute of Mental Health said in an interview.
"These notions that emotions have something to do with
disease--that stress can make you sick, that believing can make
you well--all of that has been around for thousands of years, embedded
in the popular culture. And until very recently, we haven't had
the scientific tools to prove these connections in a rigorous, scientific
way," Sternberg added.
Sternberg heads a program within her institute that examines
the role of emotions on the human immune system, which fights disease.
The NIH, an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services,
is the main biomedical research arm of the federal government.
Doctors long have noticed the connection between people's emotional
well-being and how well they cope with disease-- that a depressed
person, for example, might not fare as well as a happier, more hopeful
person. But only recently have researchers begun to examine the
precise mechanisms the body uses to translate emotions into the
physiological defenses against disease.
The aim of researchers involved in the conference on mind-body
interaction was to nail down the physical and molecular underpinnings
of emotions and disease, using the latest medical technology. They
are looking inside the brain, at hormones and at the immune system
for answers.
Experts said researchers wanted to determine the neurobiological
circuitry behind how various emotions--from happiness to loneliness--affected
ailments such as cancer or heart disease or stroke, as well as what
role sleep played in the equation. A very complex issue, they said,
was the role played by the social realm--family life, interaction
with friends, stress and other factors.
"Of course love is important," said Dr. Robert Rose,
director of the MacArthur Network on Mind-Body Interactions, a leader
in the field. "Of course relationships are important. Of course
hope and belief are important. But how important they are, and how
they work, and for what illnesses they are most effective, and what
the mechanisms are - when we can know that, we can harness it."
Rose said the long-term goal was to help people help themselves
in getting better - in responding better to disease and overcoming
symptoms.
"The trick is to translate how the thing (an experience)
goes from the brain to changes in the hormones and changes in the
systems that regulate immune system cells," he said.
"The mechanisms of the hormonal system and the immune
system--they operate at a molecular level. They are signaling how
a body should respond to a bacteria, a virus, or respond to a hormone
that changes our blood sugar," Rose added. Rose suggested that
the field of trying to determine how emotions affected health had
been trivialized in the past by self- help personalities who "talk
about the magic of it and that all of us can heal ourselves by our
thoughts."
"We're not talking about New Age," Rose added. "We're
talking about the science of what goes on - understanding scientifically
how the brain responds to the environment."
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