Meditation: The missing component in healthcare reform
ByImagine entering a doctor’s office and being greeted by a sign saying,”Quiet, Meditation in Progress,” and finding a waiting room full of people sitting with eyes closed. The doctor seated amongst them opens one eye and motions to you to sit down and join in. Could this vision be the missing component of healthcare reform?
Many progressive doctors are championing the need for prevention and lifestyle changes as a way to reduce healthcare costs, yet reams of scientific research indicates that meditation may offer a short cut to this major overhaul in health consciousness.
A truly healthy lifestyle-change begins within, with a change in attitude and feeling about ourselves. Society teaches us to direct our attention towards material gain and sensory stimulation—chasing after fulfillment in the world of product consumption. The result is usually exhaustion and lack of connection to our bodies and inner well-being. It is no wonder we have allowed our healthcare to be based on consumerism, too. When we are sick, we buy a ‘magic’ pill to fix us and pay for expensive treatments and consultations. Looking outside ourselves for health, we suppress symptoms instead of dealing with the root causes of illness.
Taking care of the body starts with taking care of the Self within. Medical doctor and author Frank Lipman suggests, “Ultimately the most effective way to increase the health of the nation and to cut healthcare costs is by taking responsibility for our own health and learn prevention. It has been repeatedly shown that what we eat, how we respond to stress, how much exercise we get, our exposure to chemicals and the quality of our relationships and social support systems is powerful medicine.”
The missing link to creating this health consciousness is creating the inner strength and clarity of mind necessary to make healthy decisions. Day to day choices about what to eat, when to go to bed, how much exercise to do, how to handle stress at work—all depend on our mood and state of mind. An effective meditation practice that releases stress and deepens ourconnection to inner contentment and mental clarity is the best foundation for creating healthy habits that last.
Fortunately, science has taken the mysticism out of meditation and its effect on health. In the market place of self-help and meditation practices, subjective reports are unreliable for the purpose of healthcare reform. But researchers have studied what happens in the brain during meditation, and how meditation effects metabolic rate, blood lactate, heart rate, blood pressure and aging.
As early as 1971, scientists started looking beyond the subjective reports of meditators and investigating the physiological correlates of the meditative state. In the physiology laboratories of UCLA, the Transcendental Mediation technique was found to produce decreases in oxygen consumption, respiratory rate, heart rate, muscle tension, and blood pressure, and a greater increase in skin resistance (showing a more relaxed state). Since that time, over 600 studies have been published in scientific journals.Transcendental Meditation is the most widely researched of all meditation techniques, showing extensive benefits for mind, body and behavior. Healthcare reformists in Washington, overwhelmed by pharmeceutical lobbyists, should consider the findings on health savings :
• A study published in the journal of Psychosomatic Medicine found that the Transcendental Meditation group had 55% less medical care utilization, both in-patient and out-patient, compared to controls matched for age, gender, and occupation. The Transcendental Meditation group had lower sickness rates in all categories of disease, including 87% less hospitalization for heart disease and 55% less for cancer. [1]
• Compared with the five leading anti-hypertension drugs over a period of 20 years, a study published in the American Journal of Hypertension indicated that the TM technique had the lowest cost and the most health benefits. The cost reduction of Transcendental Meditation ranged from 23.7% to 72.9% less than the anti-hypertensive medications. [2]
• People who practice Transcendental Meditation spend 11% less annually on health care than the general population. [3]
• Research shows that the TM technique also strengthens health by decreasing habits such as tobacco, alcohol and non-prescription drug usage, which are behavioral correlates of chronic stress and result in millions of dollars in health-care expenditures each year. For example, figures from the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids assert that smokers cost the economy $97.6 billion a year in lost productivity.
Changing the healthcare model from focusing on costly disease treatment, to preventative care with meditation as a core practice, will create a health care system that will not only be cost effective but create a higher standard of what it means to be healthy.
1. Reference: Orme-Johnson, D. W. (1987). Medical care utilization and the Transcendental Meditation program. Psychosomatic Medicine; 49(1): 493-507.
2. Reference: Schneider RH, Alexander CN, Staggers F, Orme-Johnson DW, Rainforth M, Salerno JW, Sheppard W, Castillo-Richmond A, Barnes VA, Nidich SI. A randomized controlled trial of stress reduction in African Americans treated for hypertension over one year. American Journal of Hypertension, 18:88-98, 2005.
3. Herron, R. E., Hillis, S. L. (2000). Impact of the Transcendental Meditation Program on Medical Expenses. Abstracts of the American Public Health Association 128th Annual Meeting and Exposition, Nov. 12-16, p. 178.
Question and Answer
Healthcare becomes universal then what happens to people like me that work in healthcare?
If healthcare gets revamped will I get CUT IN PAY? I am a X-ray tech. When everybody can afford healthcare, will I loose money?
I am confused if revamping healthcare is bad or good for me. I am for everybody getting great healthcare, but not for a pay cut that I worked hard for!
Jeanne Ball –
About the Author:
Jeanne Ball earned a Ph.D from Maharishi European Research University and has over 35 years of experience in teaching Transcendental Meditation to children and adults of all ages and backgrounds, specializing in ADHD, ADD, addiction recovery, anxiety, depression, hypertension and other stress related disorders. The David
Lynch Foundation., Doctors
on Meditation, Meditation for Women
18 Comments
March 31st, 2010 at 10:57 pm
If you are business saavy you may consider being on the administrative side of healthcare. Physicians are required to bill with special codes called CPT-4 codes that describe services that they provide to patients. There are also codes to describe every diagnosis.
In order for the physicians to obtain payment for services these codes must be submitted in a timely fashion to insurance companies and they must be within the scope of usual practices.
Insurance companies also deny payment to the physicians more often than not and they need people to fight for their money.
Administrators allow physicians to concentrate of helping patients without the nagging concern of redtape and paperwork.
There are also budgeting, managerial and operational issues in healthcare offices or other settings that are handled by these professionals.
You may consider obtaining a masters in heatlh administration. Please refer to http://www.ache.org.
March 31st, 2010 at 11:03 pm
1) No. Insurance may be offered through occupation, or you can get a private provider.
2)Depends on how badly I needed it.
3)78. 75 for men, 81 for women. From wiki
4)It has pros and cons. I'd like to see some reform.
5)I'd like to see more employers offer insurance, and private insurance be more affordable. I'd also like to see caps on the cost of healthcare.
6)Somewhat. If it stopped at universal healthcare, I would be okay with that. I'm afraid it may open a door allowing more socialist ideals to enter.
March 31st, 2010 at 11:49 pm
An option to consider is traveling overseas for your dental work. I am originally from Los Angeles, but have been living in Monterrey, Mexico for about 2 years now. I have had regular dental visits and am VERY impressed with the quality of the facilities and the doctors. The best part is that dental work is about 50% less expensive here than it is in the U.S! Monterrey, Mexico is just two hours south of Texas, so it is very easy to get to wherever you are. And, you can always combine your visit with a vacation! If this is something that interests you, check out http://www.travelforcare.com a Medical Travel facilitator that will help you with all the details.
March 31st, 2010 at 10:49 pm
From the Census Bureau 2010, I received in the mail the following: A letter telling me I was going to receive the 2010; a postcard asking if I need help with the 2010; the actual 2010 form itself; two additional postcards reminding me to return my 2010 by April 1. This is such an obvious waste of money it is staggering. How can you expect me to trust the Fed Gov to take over managing the Budget on Health Care Reform? Answer: I can’t trust the Gov with my piggy bank much less the HC Budget.
March 31st, 2010 at 11:57 pm
Republicians are liars and game players and a Party HIGH jacked and that does not support American Middle Class at all !! Just like they love the National RECOVERY and Reinvestment ACT and not the stimulus bill — LOL!!!
April 1st, 2010 at 12:04 am
Congrats! Social Security will pay out more this year than they will take in. This was not suppose to happed until 2016. Millions of Americans have lost everything we own for one reason – we lost our jobs. While we pleaded with you to work with the private sector to find ways to create jobs, you ignored us – you endlessly repeated HC sob stories. You were heck bent on “Making History” by passing Health Care rather than concentrating on what we really want- A JOB!!!! You must be so proud.
April 1st, 2010 at 7:24 am
I am English and now live in California. Like most people I thought that there was a huge tax burden in Britain, but after coming here I now think that's not the case.We pay two forms of tax from our wages:Income tax and National insurance. Your income tax is tax like everywhere else, national insurance pays for your pension and healthcare. I have lived in England all my life up till now and I will fiercely defend our healthcare system, the NHS (national health service). In thanks largely to the effort of our heroic doctors and nurses (and all other staff) the NHS survives….the healthcare is nothing like as bad as people make out, and there are no long waiting lists anymore (now if you're waiting more than six months for routine surgery they'll send you abroad to have it done, paid for of course). No-one pays anything for medical care and the one reason it's under stress (As a healthcare proffesional I know this from experience) is the fact that something built as a national health service is used as a world health service. People come to the UK from all over Europe to take advantage of the NHS and from all over the world. I would like to see treatment restricted to citizens/people who have paid at least 5 years national insurance contributions but at the same time I would never ever want to see anyone, citizen or not, turned away or denied medical care because of money. I'm fortunate enough to be able to afford health insurance in the US but the amount hospitals/doctors charge is disgusting and I don't really understand why people are so opposed to universal health care, can you really put a price on life?
By the way income tax is 20% of anything you earn over about 5 and a half thouse pounds ($11k) and national insurance is 11% of anything you earn over 84pounds a week ($160) And people have the option of private healthcare in england too if they want to pay for it
April 1st, 2010 at 12:46 am
The real costs are:
(1) 10 years of taxes for 6 years of benefits.
(2) Robbing Medicare and SocialSecurity to fund this healthcare bill.
(3) First 10yrs adds $500 billion to deficit. Second 10yrs adds $1.5T
You read it right, 2nd 10 years adds $1.5 trillion to the deficit. Obama’s team has not yet responded to this criticism by Republican Senators. Majority of Americans do not want this bill passed, but Democrats will try to jam it through using reconcilation tactic.
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April 2nd, 2010 at 3:09 am
Don't get sick!
April 2nd, 2010 at 2:06 am
Hey Harry! Why don’t you just RESIGN now!!! It would save everyone a lot of trouble on November 2nd!!!
April 2nd, 2010 at 5:19 pm
Hospitals carry liability insurance for their nurses. It is unlikely that a nurse will get sued unless she/he does something very deliberate and intentional to harm a patient.
April 3rd, 2010 at 1:13 am
Since the drug companies became privatized, there have been far, far less cures than when it was government controlled. Drug companies only want symptom relievers, since they will be reused over and over, whereas cures are not needed once the problem is gone. No money in cures. Drug companies are more interested in Marketing. Obscene amounts go into marketing. At least thousands if not millions are spent on just pens, clocks, notepads, lunches, clipboards, and a ton of little practically useless stuff they give away for the sole purpose of having the name all around the dr. You should go in a dr's office and just look at the amount of stuff with a drug name on it. That is only a small fraction. The government should really take back the pharmaceutical industry, that would definitely lower regular health insurance prices.
If universal health care is brought in, it doesn't mean you can't get regular health insurance. Considering how very little the health insurances pay out ($0.67 on a $10 charge) I highly doubt that the doctors income would be impacted negatively.
I think universal health care would be a great thing. And this is coming from someone who would probably have to find a new job. You don't see the people who come in who don't have to money to get seen. People who are already sick, dying, and still getting harassed about payments. There are already tons of people who die because they just didn't have the money for a doctor. What is a couple of days wait to that?
6 months is quite far fetched. I was in the military, and the same type of system ran. Health care was FREE and there were no massive wait times.
The only valid complaint that I have heard is that you would not always be able to see the same doctor. Not exactly a big deal.
It could very well be that some doctors could choose to take more regular health insurance patients, and then you could have one of those for your regular doctor.
As atrocious as regular health insurance is, most doctors take most of them. Why? To boost the number of patients. Universal health care could work the same way.
Universal health care will certainly not stop the advancement of medicine. With a little less fear involved, it may even enhance it. Besides, that sounds an awful lot like you want to believe the US is the only place in the world who has helped medicine. Nope.
Would you give up your career to keep universal health care from coming?
That's how strongly I support it.
April 2nd, 2010 at 8:49 pm
Harry Reid’s days are numbered!
LMAO
April 3rd, 2010 at 10:21 am
I am from Canada where medical coverage is free for everyone,regardless of whether you work or not.
April 3rd, 2010 at 4:25 pm
First, I doubt that healthcare will become universal.
Second, I see no reason why you as a X-ray technician should lose pay…ompare it to salaries in France & other places where they have universal health care.
April 4th, 2010 at 2:10 am
It shall be America’s great privelege to bid Harry Reid a fine adieu, come November.
April 4th, 2010 at 3:46 am
“Republicians are liars and game players and a Party HIGH jacked and that does not support American Middle Class at all !! Just like they love the National RECOVERY and Reinvestment ACT and not the stimulus bill — LOL!!! ”
And you believe the Democrats care about the middle class. HAHA. Idiots like you are what is bringing this country further and further into a welfare state. Absolute stupidity and dependency. I weep for the future.
April 4th, 2010 at 7:05 am
I live in Las Vegas. Hary Reid, you sir, I would vote for seven days a week, and twice on Sunday. You have done a lot not only for the United States of America, but a great deal for Nevada. If you need an extra body guard on your detail. I would do it for half price. Seriouslly. From one boxer to another. Keep punching through your target, and not at it. Fuck these Republicans.