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essPSYCHOTHERAPY:
THEORY,
RESEARCH AND PRACTICE
(SPRING,
1970 ISSUE)
HYPNOTHERAPY:
A REAPPRAISAL
ALFRED
A BARRIOS1
Introduction
Throughout
the years there have been periodic surges of great interest in hypnosis.
Many extraordinary phenomena have been attributed to its effects and great
claims made as to its effectiveness in therapy. Yet, in spite of such
claims, there still appear to be relatively few therapists using hypnosis
as a major tool. Why? Is it because the criticisms usually leveled at
hypnosis are true? That it is overrated, actually limited to a small
range of problems, unable to produce lasting changes? Will removal of
symptoms by hypnosis lead to new symptoms? Is it dangerous? No, there
is far too much clinical evidence contradicting these statements. Such
evidence can no longer be ignored. It is felt that the major reason behind
the rejection of hypnosis has been that for most people it is still virtually
an unknown. It seems to be human nature to stay clear of or reject anything
that doesn’t seem to fit in or be explained rationally, especially when
it seems to be something potentially powerful. It is mainly its unknown
nature that has led to the many misconceptions surrounding hypnosis and
has kept us from making the best use of it.
The
purpose of the present paper is to present some of the recent clinical
evidence contradicting the common criticisms and misconceptions surrounding
hypnotherapy, to provide a good indication of how to make the best use
of this tool, and to provide a rational explanation for its hard-to-believe
therapeutic effects.
Overview of Recent
Literature
There
have been 1,018 articles2 dealing with hypnosis in the past
three years (1966 through 1968), approximately forty per cent of which
dealt with its use in therapy.
In
the same period we find 899 articles on psychoanalytic therapy and 355
on behavior therapy.
- Formerly at University
of California, Los Angeles.
- According to the
National Library of Medicine’s Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval
System (MEDLARS) storage of information, based on some 2,400 journals.
The number given above does not include the articles on hypnosis in
dentistry (64) and anesthesia (59) or those on suggestion (391) or the
hypnosis studies done in the European socialist countries (532 in two
recently released bibliographies covering the years 1945-1965 – Hoskovec
and Svorad, 1966).
Page
1
Contrary
to popular opinion that hypnosis is only effective in certain specific
symptom-removal cases, a wide range of diagnostic categories have been
successfully treated by hypnotherapy. This includes anxiety reaction,
obsessive-compulsive neurosis, hysterical reactions and sociopathic disorders
(Hussain, 1964), as well as epilepsy (Stein, 1963), alcoholism (Chong
Tong Mun, 1966), frigidity (Richardson, 1963), stammering and homosexuality
(Alexander, 1965), various psychosomatic disorders including asthma, spontaneous
abortions, dysmenorrhea, allergic rhinitis, ulcers, dermatitis, infertility
and essential hypertension (Chong Tong Mun, 1964, 1966). Also in the
past few years an increasing number of reports indicate that the psychoses
are quite amenable to hypnotherapy (Abrams, 1963, 1964; Biddle, 1967).
Three
Large Scale Studies
Three
large scale studies in the past five years contain basic findings.
Richardson’s
(1963) study dealt with seventy-six cases of frigidity. He reports 94.7%
of the patients improved. The average number of sessions needed was 1.53.
The criterion for judging improvement was increase in percentage of orgasms.
The percentage of orgasms rose from a pre-treatment average of 24% to
a post-treatment average of 84%. Follow-ups (exact length not given)
showed that only two patients were unable to continue realizing climaxes
at the same percentages as when treatment terminated. Richardson’s method
of treatment was a combination of direct symptom removal, uncovering,
and removal of underlying causes, since he had found that direct symptom
removal alone was not always sufficient. He reports no hypnotic induction
failures.
Chong
Tong Mun’s (1964, 1966) study covered 108 patients suffering from asthma,
insomnia, alcoholism, dysmenorrhea, dermatitis, anxiety state, and impotence.
The percentage of patients reported improved was 90%. The average number
of sessions was five. The criteria for judging improvement were removal
or improvement of symptoms. The average follow-up period was nine months.
Chong Tong Mun’s method of treatment was a three-fold approach. With
some patients he would work on reeducating the patient with regard to
the behavior patterns immediately underlying the symptoms. With others
he would first regress the patient back to the original onset of the symptom.
Once regressed, he would reeducate the patient to the fact that the original
cause was no longer operative. In addition, he usually used supplementary
suggestions of direct symptom removal.
Hussain’s
(1964) study reports on 105 patients suffering from alcoholism, sexual
promiscuity, impotence and frigidity, sociopathic personality disturbance,
hysterical reactions, behavior disorders of school children, speech disorders,
and a number of different psychosomatic illnesses. The percentage of
patients reported improved was 95.2%. The number of sessions needed ranged
from four to sixteen. The criteria for
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judging
improvement were complete or almost complete removal of symptoms. In
follow-ups ranging from six months to two years no instance of relapse
or symptom substitution was noted.
Hussain’s
approach is illustrated by the case of a 35 year old woman exhibiting
the
following symptoms: anxiety, alcoholism, depression with suicidal tendencies,
sexual promiscuity, insomnia, and inability to make decisions and future
plans.
Prior
to treatment, Hussain pinpointed the various fears and negative attitudes
which he felt were underlying the symptoms – e.g., the patient feeling
unloved and unwanted in regards to her marriage, feelings of inadequacy
at being a mother, fear of her own mother, fear of responsibility and
making decisions, and guilt over her sexual promiscuity.
Hussain
then used a therapeutic technique somewhat similar to Wolpe’s (1958) desensitization
technique to eliminate these fears and negative attitudes. For example,
he would have the patient think of a particular fear-producing situation
and recondition her by suggesting she would find herself calm and relaxed
in the situation. This particular approach is very often used now in
one form or another. Abrams (1963) refers to it as an “artificial situation”
technique. Through hypnosis the patient is able to experience his new
attitudes in an “artificial situation,” an imagined situation. It differs
from Wolpe’s approach in two respects. First of all, Wolpe does not often
use hypnosis. Secondly, Wolpe has the patient go through a hierarchy
of “imagined situations,” going from easiest to deal with to most difficult.
(There is no reason, however, why this hierarchy approach cannot be incorporated
into hypnotherapy.)
With
the above patient Hussain also used direct symptom-removal suggestions.
For example, “aversion to the thought and sight of alcohol was also built
up by direct suggestion.”
This
patient was discharged from the hospital after twelve sessions. “No relevant
symptoms were left behind and there was no relapse during the six-month
follow-up period.”
Current Method of
Using Hypnosis
As
one can see in the above studies, and this probably comes as a surprise
to most therapists, the main use of hypnosis is not as a means
of direct symptom removal. Nor is its main use as an uncovering device.
The current trend is to use hypnosis to remove the negative attitudes,
fears, maladaptive behavior patterns, and negative self-images underlying
the symptoms. Uncovering and direct symptom removal are still used to
a certain extent, but usually in conjunction with this new main function.
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In
the past, so much emphasis was directed towards symptoms and disease processes
that some of us were guilty of forgetting the person in the body. It
is incumbent upon us [hypnotherapists] to concentrate on treating the
particular patient who presents the symptom rather than the symptom presented
by the patient (Mann, 1963).
Psychiatric
hypnotherapy, as practiced today by the leading practitioners in the field,
has in common with all other forms of modern psychiatric treatment that
it concerns itself not only with the presenting symptoms but chiefly with
the dynamic impasse in which the patient finds himself and with his character
structure (Alexander, 1965).
The
objection that the results of symptom removal will seldom be permanent
is certainly not valid. This may have been so in the past, when direct
symptom removal alone was practiced and nothing was done to strengthen
the patients ability to cope with his difficulty or to encourage him to
stand on his own two feet (Hartland, 1965).
This
change is being stressed in the present paper because it is part of its
purpose to fit hypnotherapy into “the scheme of things.” Many therapists
have rejected hypnosis
because
its direct symptom approach of the past clashed violently with their dynamic
approach. Now we see that such a clash need no longer exist.
The
Ahistorical vs. the Historical Approach in Therapy
Some
hypnotherapists use, in part, a historical approach, going back into
the patient’s childhood and changing his attitudes regarding the causes
of these patterns (Fromm, 1965; Abrams, 1963; Chong Tong Mun, 1964,1966).
However, most hypnotherapy is ahistorical and, it would seem, faster.
If we wanted to change the direction of a river it might be much easier
to work on the main current directly (once it had been located) rather
than going back upstream, locating all the tributaries, and pointing each
one in a new direction.
A
comment on the Dangers Ascribed to Hypnosis
In
the past there have been certain dangers ascribed to the use of hypnosis
– for example, the danger of a psychotic break, or the substitution of
more damaging symptoms. According to a number of investigators (Kroger,
1963; Abrams, 1964) these dangers have been grossly exaggerated. However,
whatever dangers there were have been virtually eliminated by this new
approach. The few mishaps that have occurred in the past resulted either
from (1) the misuse of hypnosis as an uncovering agent, or (2) its misuse
as a direct symptom remover. The first type of mishap was produced by
a therapist who would allow, or force, the patient to become aware of
repressed information which he was not strong enough to face. The second
type of mishap occurred when the therapist wrested away a symptom which
the patient was using as a crutch before he was strong enough to stand
on his own.
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Hypnotizability
of Patients
Freud
abandoned hypnosis because of “the small number of people who could be
put into a deep state of hypnosis” at that time and because in the cathartic
approach, symptoms would disappear at first, but reappear later if the
patient-therapist relationship were disturbed (Freud, 1955, p. 237).
In the above studies the only hypnotic induction
failures
were reported by Chong Tong Mun (eight failures out of 108 patients.)
This can mean one of two things: the hypnotic induction procedures have
improved since Freud’s day, or that the reconditioning approach used in
these studies (as opposed to Freud’s cathartic approach) does not require
very deep levels of hypnosis. There is evidence that both factors bay
be involved.
Although
many have thought that hypnotic susceptibility was a set character trait,
there are a number of studies which now seem to indicate that this is
not the case, and that responsiveness can be increased by certain changes
in the hypnotic induction procedure (Pascal and Salzberg, 1959; Sachs
and Anderson, 1967; Baykushev, 1969), as
well
as by means of a pre-induction talk aimed at insuring a positive attitude,
an appropriate expectancy and a high motivation toward hypnosis (Dorcus,
1963; Barber, 1969; Barrios, 1969).
With
regard to the depth of hypnosis required for the reconditioning approach
to work, there are a number of therapists who feel that only a light state
of hypnosis is necessary (Van Pelt, 1958; Kline, 1958; Kroger, 1963)
A study by Barrios (1969) gives this contention some support; it was found
that an increase in the conditioning of the salivary response could be
produced almost as effectively by lighter levels of hypnosis as by deeper
levels.
The
latter point brings us to the question of whether hypnotic induction is
necessary at all for the re-conditioning approach to work. Judging from
the work of Wolpe (1958) it would appear that hypnosis is not an absolutely
necessary requirement. This would also be supported by the work of Barber
(1961, 1965) who found that hypnotic phenomena could be produced without
a prior hypnotic induction. However, the real question to be answered
is not whether hypnotic induction is absolutely necessary, but whether
it can further facilitate the conditioning process. Wolpe, himself, concedes
the hypnosis apparently does facilitate the conditioning:
“Patients who cannot relax will not make progress with this method. Those
who cannot or will not be hypnotized but who can relax will make progress,
although apparently more slowly than when hypnosis is used.” (Wolpe,
1958, p. 141; italics added).
Also, although Barrios’ (1969) study indicated that conditioning could
be increased during lighter levels of hypnosis, it was also found that
there was no increase in conditioning with those subjects indicating no
response to the hypnotic induction.
As
pointed out in the theory (Barrios, 1969), hypnotic and waking suggestion
are
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on
the same continuum and hypnotic induction should be looked upon as a procedure
whereby we can increase the probability of getting a more positive response
to suggestion. The next question to be decided now is not so much whether
hypnotic induction procedures increase responsiveness (this is fairly
well accepted – e.g., Barber, 1969) but what variables in the hypnotic
induction are playing the key roles and what can be done to strengthen
the effectiveness of these factors.
Comparison
with Psychoanalysis and Behavior Therapy
In
Wolpe’s comparison of his and the psychoanalytic approaches (Wolpe, Salter,
and Reyna, 1964), we find the following: Based on all psychoneurotic
patients seen, the number of patients cured or much improved by psychoanalysis
was 45% in one study involving 534 patients and 31% in the other study
involving 595 patients (the only two large scale studies in the literature
on psychoanalysis). The average duration of treatment for the improved
patients (given only for the first study) was three to four years at an
average of three to four sessions per week, or an average of approximately
600 sessions
per
patient. For Wolpe’s approach we find that, based on all patients seen,
the recovery rate was 65% in his own study involving 295 patients (usually
reported as 90% of 210 patients) and 78% in a study by Lazarus involving
408 patients. The duration of treatment for the improved patients was
an average of thirty sessions in the former and fourteen in the latter.
Averaging
the above figures, we find that for psychoanalysis we can expect a recovery
rate of 38% after approximately 600 sessions. For Wolpian therapy, we
can expect a recovery rate of 72% after an average of 22 sessions, and
for hypnotherapy we can expect a recovery rate of 93% after an average
of 6 sessions.
It
is interesting to note the negative correlation between number of sessions
and percentage recovery rate. At first sight this seems paradoxical.
However, if a form of therapy is truly effective, it should not only increase
recovery rate, but also shorten the number of sessions necessary (as well
as widen the range of cases treatable).
The
Need for a Rational Explanation
In
spite of all the encouraging reports, there continues to be considerable
hesitation on the part of psychotherapists to use hypnosis. Hypnosis
is still looked upon as an “unknown” by most therapists. They are as
yet not aware of any reasonable rational explanation for hypnotic phenomena
that would satisfy them, one that would tie these phenomena down to observable
facts and laws. As long as hypnosis continues to exude an air of mysticism
and charlatanism, it will continue to be rejected by many, no matter how
great the claims on its behalf.
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An
Explanation Based on Principles of Conditioning
The
experienced therapist really should not be so surprised at the effectiveness
of hypnosis in facilitating therapy. Hypnotic induction can be looked
upon as a technique for establishing a very strong rapport, for establishing
a greater confidence, a greater belief in the therapist, whereby the latter’s
words will be much more effective. As Sundberg and Tyler (1962) point
out, one of the common features among all methods of
psychotherapy
is the attempt to “create a strong personal relationship that can be
used as a vehicle for constructive change… It is a significant fact
that many theoretical writers, as their experience increases, come to
place much more emphasis on this variable” (pp.293-294).
The
question still remains, however – what exactly is the process whereby
“mere words” can produce such great changes in personality.
As
pointed out in Barrios’ (1969) theory of hypnosis, the ability of words
to produce behavior changes is really not so difficult to understand if
we are familiar with the principles of higher-order conditioning.
First
of all, we know that words can act as conditioned stimuli.
Pavlov
recognized this fact:
Obviously
for man speech provides conditioned stimuli which are just as real as
any other stimuli… Speech, on account of the whole preceding life of
the adult, is connected up with all the internal and external stimuli
which can reach the cortex, signaling all of them and replacing all of
them, and therefore it can call forth all those reactions of the organism
which are normally determined by the actual stimuli themselves (Pavlov,
1960, p. 407).
Now,
according to principles of high-order conditioning we know that by paring
word B with word A we should transfer the response produced by word B
to word A and consequently anything that would evoke word A. Thus, for
example, if we wanted to condition a person to be more relaxed in the
presence of people, we would pair the words “people” (A) and “relaxed”
(B), using a sentence or suggestion such as, “From now on you will find
yourself more relaxed in the presence of people.” Mower’s
theoretical formulations on the sentence as a conditioning device (Mowrer,
1960) tend to support this contention.
Of
course, we know that under ordinary circumstances suggestions are not
always accepted (and thus conditioning doesn’t always result when an appropriate
suggestion is given). Why is this? Osgood (1963) holds that a suggestion
will tend to be rejected if it is incongruent with the subject’s previously
held beliefs and attitudes or his present perceptions. It would seem
that if there were some means of eliminating the latter we should be able
to have a suggestion more readily accepted and thus facilitate the higher-order
conditioning. Hypnosis is such a means.
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Thus
we come to the reason hypnosis is so effective in facilitating therapy:
the incongruent perceptions, beliefs, and attitudes are kept from interfering
with the suggestion (and thus with the conditioning). As put by Pavlov:
The command of the hypnotist, in correspondence with
the general law, concentrates the excitation in the subject (which is
in a condition of partial inhibition) in some definite narrow region,
at the
same
time intensifying (by negative induction) the inhibition of the rest of
the cortex and so abolishing all competing effects of contemporary
stimuli [present perceptions] and traces left by previously received
ones [previously held beliefs and attitudes]. This accounts for the
large and practically insurmountable influence of suggestions as a stimulus
during hypnosis as well as shortly after it (Pavlov, 1960, p. 407; italics
added).
As
an illustration, let us say we wanted to change a patient’s self-image
from that of an inadequate person to a more self-confident one. If under
ordinary circumstances we suggested that he would no longer feel inadequate,
it would most likely accomplish little. This is because the patient’s
negative self-image, usually ever-present and quite dominant, would quickly
suppress any positive image suggested, or at least keep it from being
too vivid or real. But in the hypersuggestible hypnotic state conditions
are different. The patient’s negative self-image is now more easily inhibited
and should therefore be less likely to interfere when we attempt to evoke
the positive self-image through suggestion. As a result, the conditioning
can take place and new associations can be made. The person can truly
picture himself feeling self-confident in various situations and these
new conditioned associations in turn can lead to new behavior. This new
attitude can now become permanent by means of self-reinforcement, just
as his old negative attitude had been kept permanent by self-reinforcement.
As long as the patient
has
negative attitudes, these are self-reinforcing. They lead to his tensing
up, acting awkward and making numerous mistakes. Also, he is unlikely
to believe any praise or any positive occurrences should they chance his
way. But if this negative self-image has been replaced by a positive
one, the opposite cycle can result. Being more confident and relaxed
he will naturally be more likely to be accepted. Also, he will now be
more open to believing and accepting praise and positive outcomes.
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Page 8
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Page 9
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