African PTSD Relief, a charitable, not-for-profit, Iowa-based corporation, announces publication of research on its Africa project
Study finds significant reduction in post-traumatic stress disorder among African war refugees using Transcendental Meditation™
NEW YORK, Feb. 12, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- African war refugees who practiced Transcendental Meditation™ (TM) had significant reductions in post-traumatic stress symptoms within 10 days, according to a new study published in the Journal of Traumatic Stress (February 2014, Volume 27/pp. 112-115) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jts.2014.27.issue-1/issuetoc. After 30 days, subjects were virtually free of PTSD symptoms. These findings corroborated an earlier study published in the same journal in April 2013 (Volume 26, Issue 2/ pp. 295-298) that showed PTSD symptoms among African refugees went from "severe" to "non-symptomatic levels" after 30 days of Transcendental Meditation and remained low at 135 days.
According to Refugees International: "For more than two decades, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has struggled with ongoing conflict in its eastern provinces. Today, an estimated 2.6 million Congolese are internally displaced, and more than 460,000 have fled their homes into neighboring countries." For years, these refugees have been exposed to combat, violence, sexual assault, and torture, and many witnessed the abuse and murder of loved ones—resulting in extremely high levels of PTSD. They commonly suffered from mental flashbacks, bouts of anger, overwhelming despair, and often, the inability to care for themselves and their families. The study participants were taken from this highly traumatized group.
In 2011, the David Lynch Foundation and African PTSD Relief co-sponsored an initiative to make the Transcendental Meditation program available to initially 10,000 Africans suffering from PTSD.
In the past, TM has been used successfully to treat PTSD:
- An early study, published in the Journal of Counseling and Development (1985; 64, 212-15), showed significant reduction of PTSD symptoms among Vietnam War veterans practicing TM over 3 months, in contrast to no significant improvements for a group receiving psychotherapy for the same period.
- In 2011, Military Medicine (176, 626–630) published a pilot study showing the effectiveness of TM in reducing PTSD in veterans of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. Subjects showed a 50 percent reduction in PTSD symptoms after 8 weeks of Transcendental Meditation.
- In January 2013, the U.S. Veterans Administration announced a $2.4 million TM - PTSD relief study to counter PTSD among American military veterans.
Colonel Brian Rees, MD, primary author of the Congo study, with 5 tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq explained, "The TM technique provides the mind and body with a unique state of 'restful alertness,' which reduces deeply-rooted stress and improves brain function." TM is practiced sitting comfortably with the eyes closed for 20 minutes twice daily.
AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEW:
Colonel Brian Rees, MD, primary author
Russell Simmons, supporter of African PTSD Relief programs
David Lynch, Hollywood director; Founder, David Lynch Foundation
BACKGROUND:
3-minute video: How TM helped refugee Esperance.
David Lynch Foundation, Africa. http://www.davidlynchfoundation.org/africa.
YouTube: http://bit.ly/AfricanRefugeesOvercomePTSD
Twitter: AfricaPTSRelief
SOURCE David Lynch Foundation
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