Jain, S., Pavlik, D., Distefan, J., Bruyere, R. L., Acer, J., Garcia, R., . . . Mills, P. J. (2012). Complementary medicine for fatigue and cortisol variability in breast cancer survivors: a randomized controlled trial. Cancer, 118, 777–787.
To examine, within a blinded, randomized, controlled trial design, whether biofield therapy (hands-on healing) would significantly reduce fatigue in survivors with persistent cancer-related fatigue compared to mock healing and a wait-list control group.
Energy chelation (hands-on-healing with standard hand positions focusing for five to seven minutes over each body part, i.e., feet, hips, knees, bladder, stomach, hands, elbows, shoulders, heart, throat, head, and heart) for one hour, two times each week for four weeks in the intervention group; mock biofield therapy for one hour, two times each week for four weeks; and a wait-list with no specific intervention. All participants submitted saliva samples at four time points. Timing of self-reported measures of quality of life (QOL) and depression were not reported.
The study used a blinded, randomized, controlled design.
Nonspecific factors are important in responses to biofield interventions for fatigue. Belief predicts QOL responses but not fatigue or cortisol variability. Biofield therapies increase cortisol variability independent of belief and other nonspecific factors. A need exists to further examine the effects of specific processes of biofield healing on outcomes for cancer populations.
Use of a hands-on healing intervention takes time and a skill set not traditionally taught in undergraduate or graduate nursing programs. Few clinical nurses have the time or skills to practice hands-on healing as described in the study. The intervention is noninvasive and a potentially effective independent nursing intervention with a minimal side effect profile.