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Schizophrenia in "Yoga Therapy for Schizophrenia," Bangalore Article Review

Pages:2 (574 words)

Sources:2

Subject:Health

Topic:Yoga

Document Type:Article Review

Document:#86976181


Schizophrenia

In "Yoga Therapy for Schizophrenia," Bangalore & Varambally (2012) explore a gap in the research on treatments for schizophrenia. The authors point out that pharmacological interventions and traditional psychotherapeutic techniques have remained "sub-optimal," if not totally ineffective (p. 85). A lack of meaningful progress in schizophrenia research gives rise to more nuanced and cross-disciplinary understandings of how the disease can be treated. The authors note that prior research has revealed the efficacy of yoga as a viable treatment intervention for patients suffering from anxiety and depression. Using prior research on both yoga and on schizophrenia as a foundation, the authors develop research hypothesis that suggests yoga therapy for improving client outcomes. In particular, the researchers focus on the potential of yoga therapy to curb or mitigate the expression of negative symptoms (such as amotivation, anhedonia, emotional blunting and poor insight) in patients with schizophrenia.

"Yoga Therapy for Schizophrenia" is not an experimental research design. The research design is exploratory and utilizes a meta-analytic methodology involving the use of academic databases. The authors used PubMed/Medline, EBSCO, Google Scholar, and databases housing dissertations. Searches were conducted in English only. The authors used the search terms in Boolean format as 'Yoga AND Schizophrenia' and 'Psychosis AND yoga.' Articles that met the criteria for inclusion were selected and analyzed for the results.

Primary results yielded research studies, including experimental studies, on the impact of a disciplined yoga practice condition (as an independent variable) on observable symptoms of schizophrenia, as evaluated by psychiatrists. Research does show promising results that substantiate the hypothesis that yoga practice can significantly reduce the expression of negative symptoms in patients with schizophrenia. Moreover, a large number of the studies under review took place in controlled environments…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Bangalore, N. & Varambally, S. (2012). Yoga therapy for Schizophrenia. International Journal of Yoga. 5.2 (July-December 2012): p85.

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