Um, Michael? 

 The article is citing people critical of the AHRQ review which found hat 
meditation doesn't work. Note that the review found that NO meditation practice 
worked, not just TM.
 

 So the question arises: did you mean to cite teh AHRQ review as being 
definitive, or did you mean to cite the people who were critical of the review, 
since that is the main point of the article: people disagree with the review.
 

 L
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mjackson74@...> wrote :

 Here is what the real world thinks of all your precious "science" about TM:
 
 Top researchers criticize new meditation and health study
 Rush PR News/July 26, 2007
 
 Scientists stated, "A controversial new government-funded report, which found 
that meditation does not improve health, is methodologically flawed, 
incomplete, and should be retracted. "
 
 New York, NY (rushprnews) July 26, 2007 - This is the consensus of a growing 
number of researchers in the U.S. and abroad who have reviewed the report and 
are critical of its conclusions.
 
 "Meditation Practices for Health: State of the Research" was a health 
technology assessment report conducted at the University of Alberta and 
sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the 
NIH-National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. The report was 
released earlier this month.
 
 Respected reviewer urged authors to withhold publication—"Analytical strategy 
looked haphazard and ad hoc"
 
 Professor Harald Walach of the University of Northampton and School of Social 
Sciences and the Samueli Institute for information Biology in England reviewed 
the paper before its release and strongly urged the authors to withhold 
publication. "When I looked carefully into the details of the study, the whole 
analytical strategy looked rather haphazard and ad hoc," Walach said.
 
 Relevant studies excluded from AHRQ findings
 
 Robert Schneider, M.D., F.A.C.C., is one of the leading researchers on the 
health effects of meditation in the nation. Dr. Schneider has been the 
recipient of more than $22 million in grants from the National Institutes of 
Health over the past 20 years for his research on the effects of the 
Transcendental Meditation technique and natural medicine on cardiovascular 
disease. He says that relevant findings were excluded from the report, 
including peer-reviewed studies on the effects of this meditation technique on 
hypertension, cardiovascular disease, myocardial ischemia, atherosclerosis, 
changes to physiology, and improvements to mental and physical health.
 
 Dr. Schneider cited two studies published in the American Journal of 
Cardiology in 2005, which demonstrated that individuals with high blood 
pressure who were randomly assigned to TM groups had a 30% lower risk for 
mortality than controls. These studies should have been included in the AHRQ 
report, Dr. Schneider said, but were inexplicably excluded. In addition, 75 
published studies were overlooked, even though these were sent to the authors 
by one of the reviewers.
 
 Dr. Schneider said the AHRQ report incorrectly analyzed studies and 
incorrectly rated the quality of the studies while applying statistical methods 
poorly, arbitrarily, and unsystematically. The report also included errors in 
collecting data from research studies, in recording data from papers, and in 
classifying studies. Several peer-reviewers pointed out major errors and 
inadequacies in the report prior to publication. However, these critiques by 
outside reviewers were largely ignored. (For critiques of the report, see 
http://www.mum.edu/inmp/welcome.html) http://www.mum.edu/inmp/welcome.html)
 
 Dr. Schneider also cited a study published in the American medical 
Association's journal Archives of Internal Medicine in 2006—one year after the 
AHRQ review ended in 2005—which confirmed that the Transcendental Meditation 
technique lowers high blood pressure in heart disease patients. The study was 
conducted at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and was funded by a 
$1.2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health.
 
 Dr. Schneider directs the Institute for Natural Medicine and Prevention at 
Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, which was supported by 
an $8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health as a specialized 
center of research in complementary and alternative medicine and cardiovascular 
disease. 
 --------------------------------------------
 


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