--- In [email protected], Jason Spock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  
>     Your Opinion Mark.??    

(in deniro voice): You talking to ME??  Well I think tm research, esp
physiological, is infinitely better than M-effect research.  I don't
enough about meta-analysis to really comment, though obviously it must
depends on the quality of the underlying studies and I wish there were
more independent tm studies too.  My personal belief is that tm is a
great meditation technique, though not "far superior" to every other
technique out there, as this study concludes.  If it were affordable
I'd be telling everyone to start it.  Also I don't think the TMO
really cares that much anymore about teaching tm.


Meta Analysis Reveals the Power of TMBy David Orme-Johnson, from TM
News Oct 95
> Transcendental Meditation is far superior to other meditation and
relaxation teckniques in increasing self-actualization because it
provides the experience of Transcendental consciousness
> 
> Last year, we reported on the publication of a meta-analysis which
showed that Transcendental Meditation was significantly more effective
than other meditation and relaxation techniques in a wide range of
areas. Here we carry a report by one of the authors of the study, Dr
David Orme-Johnson.
> 
> "One day early in 1998 I was walking on air. I received a letter
from the prestigious American Journal of Health Promotion saying that
not only had our paper been accepted for publication, but that it was
slated to be the lead article* in the May/June 1998 issue. Receiving a
letter of acceptance is always a great joy because it means that
months and sometimes years of work have finally come to fruition. It
means that the reviewers-top researchers and statisticians-have
scrutinized the paper and concluded that it is a valid piece of
knowledge. It will go out to thousands of scientists, doctors,
business people, and policy makers around the world. And being the
lead article means highest visibility.
> 
> But publication of this paper was particularly exciting because its
scope was huge-an overview of a total of 597 studies involving an
estimated 20,000 subjects. It showed the Transcendental Meditation
technique to be far superior to all other forms of meditation and
relaxation in the areas of anxiety reduction, blood pressure
reduction, physiological relaxation, self-actualization, improved
psychological outcomes, and decreased use of cigarettes, alcohol, and
drugs. And yet the paper was only three pages long!
> 
> 
> 
> How did we pack so much information into such a small space? The key
was a technique called meta-analysis. Meta-analysis allows one to
compare a wide variety of research designs and measurement scales by
creating a standardized measure that can be applied to all the
studies. It's like creating a "common denominator" for the research
results from many different universities and research institutions.
Then all the research on different techniques can be directly compared
and grand conclusions can be drawn.
> 
> Dr Ken Walton of the Department of Chemistry at Maharishi University
of Management and I decided to collect all the meta-analyses on the TM
technique and other meditation and relaxation techniques together and
consolidate these findings into one short paper.
> 
> The first meta-analysis on the Transcendental Meditation technique
appeared in 1981 by Dr Philip Ferguson. Dr Ferguson found that the
Transcendental Meditation technique improved psychological health
significantly more than Zen meditation or relaxation response techniques.
> 
> Then in 1987, Dr Michael Dillbeck and I published a meta-analysis in
the American Psychologist, showing that the Transcendental Meditation
technique produces a greater reduction of stress parameters than does
ordinary rest.
> 
> In 1989, Dr Kenneth Eppley at Stanford University and colleagues
published a meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Psychology on 146
studies showing that the Transcendental Meditation technique was far
superior to other techniques in reducing anxiety. The beauty of this
study is that it cross-validates the physiological results. Research
in two domains, physiology and psychology, all pointed to the same
conclusions. This is also a wonderful study because it shows that the
results are 1) upheld by the strongest experimental designs, 2) get
stronger the longer one meditates, and 3) are valid no matter who does
the research or where it is published.
> 
> For blood pressure, we added the results of Dr. Robert Schneider and
Dr. Charles Alexander's study of hypertension in Oakland to a
meta-analysis that came out in the Annals of Internal Medicine. While
Schneider and Alexander's study showing that the TM technique is
effective in reducing hypertension, the meta-analysis found that other
techniques are simply not effective. In fact, the Sixth Joint National
Committee on the Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood
Pressure concluded that this research on the TM technique is the only
properly controlled trial of stress reduction that has shown
effectiveness in reducing blood pressure among people with hypertension. 
> 
> The other four meta-analyses we used were the work of Charles,
Maxwell Rainforth, and colleagues. Their 1991 paper in the Journal of
Social Behavior and Personality shows that the Transcendental
Meditation technique is far superior to other meditation and
relaxation technique in increasing self-actualization because it
provides the experience of Transcendental Consciousness. Their 1994
paper in the Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly included three
meta-analyses showing that the TM technique is highly effective in
reducing cigarette, alcohol, and drug abuse, indicating the power of
the technique in normalizing physiological and psychological imbalances.
> 
> When we consider the billions of dollars spent every year on
tranquilizers and antihypertensive medication, and add the toll to the
national budget that cigarettes, alcohol and drug abuse take, the
clear conclusion from these meta-analyses is that the TM programme is
not only highly effective-it's the biggest bargain in America!" 
> 
> David Orme-Johnson, Ph.D., is the founding chairman of the
Psychology Department at Maharishi University of Management. He has
published over 50 papers and is an internationally recognized expert
on the effects meditation.
> 
> *Orme-Johnson DW, Walton KG. All Approaches to Preventing and
Reversing the Effects of Stress Are Not the Same. American Journal of
Health Promotion 1998; (5):297-299
> 
>  
> -------------------OriginalMessage------------------
> From: "Markmeredith2002" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  Date: Fri, 11 Nov 2005
16:16:34 -0000 
> Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Was Lynch - Now Crime, Abortion & the
DC study 
>     
>   A realistic impact of the course/study would have been to inspire
some other group of academics or public policy people to investigate
further with their own research.  I don't think that was the atttude
of the TMO - their attitude was 'we did this study which proves our
case, now give us a $billion in public funds to support levitators or
maybe hindu priests'.
> 
>   Actually I remember being befuddled at the end of the course when
MMY on the teleconference had no interest in talking about the courese
and its effect at all - he had some huckster from south america with
him and a plan for sidhas to move to brazil to become farmers.  There
was the slogan '40 hectares for world peace" or something like that. 
It was really disappointing to me after so many of us interrupted
their lives to do the course and try to prove the ME once and for all.
>  
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>               
> ---------------------------------
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