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'Six week
stay in Hindu temple as good as medication' report researchers
July 15, 2002
- Source newscientist.com
A six-week stay at a Hindu temple in Tamil Nadu can produce the
same improvement in people with severe psychiatric disorders as
a month-long course of standard drugs, say researchers in India.
A team led by
Ramanathan Raguram of the National Institute of Mental Health and
Neurosciences in Bangalore studied all 31 people who came for help
and stayed at the Muthuswamy temple in Velayuthampalayampudur between
June and August 2000.
The patients
were evaluated by a trained psychiatrist. Six were diagnosed with
delusional disorders, 23 with paranoid schizophrenia and two with
bipolar disorder. At the end of their stays, their scores on test
called the brief psychiatric rating scale had improved by an average
of nearly 20 per cent.
No specific
rituals or ceremonies intended to improve mental health were performed
in the temple. The patients attended a simple morning prayer for
15 minutes, and then spent the rest of the day helping out with
routine temple work.
"What they
were given is tender loving care, in a non-threatening environment,
in tune with their own cultural beliefs, with the hope of recovery,"
says Raguram. "And in the history of psychiatry, these were
the principles on which asylums were originally built."
In India, many mentally ill people of all faiths visit religious
sites renowned for having curative powers. The Muthuswamy temple
is built over the tomb of a man who lived a century ago and who,
according to legend, could cure mental illnesses with a touch of
his hand. His descendants now run the temple and offer its services
for free.
The 31 patients
had been suffering for an average of 71 weeks. Only one had received
any professional care.
The dramatic
improvement in test scores matches those expected within four weeks
of administering drugs such as chlorpromazine and risperidone, says
Raguram. "We were not really prepared for it," he says.
Assen Jablensky,
an expert on mental disorders at the University of Western Australia,
Perth, points out that such findings are not specific to India,
or any particular faith. "For example, a 'treatment protocol'
in many ways similar to the healing temple of Muthuswamy has been
practised at the traditional therapeutic village of Aro in Nigeria,"
he says.
But he cautions
that such treatments should be considered as complementary to other
approaches, and not an alternative.
Raguram admits
one problem with the study - there were no controls. "To prove
the efficacy we need double-blind control studies, which is very
difficult to conduct in such settings," he says.
Journal reference:
British Medical Journal (vol 325, p38)
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