Abstract

ObjectivesJohrei is a type of biofield therapy that is said to bring physical and mental well-being to the recipient. This study sought to measure changes in body temperature and circulation resulting from Johrei treatment, for generally healthy subjects and for individuals with a tendency toward hypothermia. ParticipantsA total of 199 qualified Johrei practitioners and 144 non-qualified operators provided Johrei and placebo treatments, respectively. Volunteer subjects —186 in general health and 39 with a hypothermia tendency — participated in this study to receive either or both of these treatments. MethodsEach subject was given a 10 min treatment daily by either a qualified practitioner or a non-qualified operator. The effects on subjects of receiving each treatment were compared by observing quantitative changes in blood flow and surface body temperature after a course of treatment. ResultsA total of 107 healthy subjects were randomly assigned to the qualified-practitioner group or the non-qualified operator group. Treatment by qualified practitioners significantly enhanced blood flow and surface body temperature in the subjects’ designated neck area compared to that in treatment by non-qualified operators. This finding was further corroborated by a comparative experiment in which each healthy subject was treated by both a qualified practitioner and a non-qualified operator. These results indicate that only the qualified-practitioner treatment increased the subject's-blood flow and surface body temperature. Similarly, in a comparative study of qualified-practitioner treatment against non-qualified-operator treatment, subjects tending toward hypothermia showed increased blood flow and elevated body temperature with only the authentic Johrei treatment.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call