Monday, July 9, 2012


THE PSYCHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF HOPE AND EXPECTATION
In his book, The Biology of Belief, Cell Biologist Bruce Lipton writes, “University of Connecticut psychology professor Irving Kirsch found that 80% of the effect of antidepressants, as measured in clinical trials, could be attributed to the placebo effect. The data show that more than half of the clinical trials for the six leading antidepressants, the drugs did not out outperform placebo sugar pills.”

What this means is that the power of the belief that the pills will bring relief for depression will have a significant impact on the effectiveness of the pills. What is in the pill, whether it is a drug or sugar water, appears not to be the important thing. According to Lipton, the important thing is the power of your expectation and belief which directly and dynamically impact the biology of your brain.
Just through the influence of their words and the authority of their body language, health professionals can communicate hope and positive expectancy or hopelessness. A couple of stories from my own life will illustrate this point.

In 1984 my father was diagnosed with lung cancer and the attending physician told him that he had less than 6 months to live. As a family we tried everything possible to keep his spirits up but he remained haunted by the words of that doctor.  He expected to die and six months he was dead.

When my mom had a heart attack in 2005, the attending cardiologist told her that there was little he could do because of her age and that she could die. When I asked her why she was crying, she told me what he had said. I called him by telephone from the nurse’s station and asked him why he told her that. He said he had been a cardiologist for over 35 years and I had no right to question him.  I told him that I do not know what medical school he attended but he didn’t even learn the most basic principle; to practice good medicine you always leave a patient with hope. When he began to argue with me, I fired him. The nurses and attendants at the nurse’s station who were attentively listening to this conversation, enthusiastically applauded. I hired another cardiologist and told him to approach my mom’s condition with positive expectancy. He assured me that he would. His manner was gracious and his voice optimistic. He told her that he could treat her heart condition with medication. 7 years later, my mom is still living on her own cooking, baking, cleaning, and excitedly watching the Dodgers. She just turned 98 and thoroughly enjoys life. She expects to live to be 100 and she probably will.

Dr. Lipton writes, “Learning how to harness your mind to promote growth is the secret of life. Of course the secret of life is not a secret at all. Teachers like Buddha and Jesus have been telling us the same story for millennia. Now science is pointing in the same direction. It is not your genes but your beliefs that control your life!”

John A. Tamiazzo, PhD Author of Returning to the Land of Oz available at Amazon.com, Amazon.ca and Barnesandnoble.com both in paperback and e-book formats

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