Abstract

Abstract Between summer 2020 and the end of 2021 the Cardiology facility of the Savigliano hospital trained 2 doctors and 2 nurses in hypnotic communication (IC). IC is a communicative approach, which involves establishing a relationship with the patient and can allow carrying out the planned procedure by bringing the patient into a modified state of consciousness that reverberates on physical and sensory perceptions up to a trans hypnotic. This particular connection with the patient can be represented by a simple communication deepening up to the real trance and allows to overcome the procedures with a reduction in the use of anesthetics and analgesics, with a control of procedural anxiety, up to complete analgesia, but also the management of some particular procedural needs such as the prolonged maintenance of the supine position on an operating room table with the patient awake. All patient has an extremely positive experience. Hypnosis can also optimize the abilities and performances of those who use it. During this period, at the Cardiology facility of the Savigliano we started using IC to perform procedures in the hemodynamics, electrophysiology and transesophageal echocardiography. In the hemodynamics and electrophysiology room, IC has increasingly become the preferred communicative approach to the patient who are going to have a procedure. A total of 123 patients booked for coronary angioplasty were managed in IC, including 5 in emergency, 24 PM implants and defibrillators, 3 electrophysiological studies and a foramen ovale closure procedure. In recent months, an outpatient operator has started performing IC on 10 transesophageal echocardiogram exams. In 70 patients the session was concluded with an anchorage, which is a moment in which the patient is allowed to reproduce the modified state of consciousness independently, to face moments of anxiety, fatigue or other procedures. In the majority of patients, the ratification of the presence of a trance state was positive, in a smaller percentage of cases (about 15%) the ratification was sometimes not evident or if it was, the patient was expelled during the procedure, but in 100% of cases the patient‘s experience was extremely positive both in terms of perceived closeness of the healthcare staff, and in terms of tolerance to the procedure and positive experience of the latter.

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