This post can't be any less relevant than the average penis size of men from 
India.  Boy, who needs coffee in the morning with a story like that?

Here is an interesting study. Based on its results, I wonder if the unwanted 
pregnancy rate could be reduced by invoking the power of prayer.  Although I 
think in most of those cases prayer is after the fact.

JPG

======================

Prayer may influence in vitro fertilization success

Blinded and randomized international study reveals surprising results

New York, NY-Prayer seems to almost double the success rate of in
vitro fertilization procedures that lead to pregnancy, according to
surprising results from a study carefully designed to eliminate bias.

The controversial findings, published in the September issue of the
Journal of Reproductive Medicine, reveal that a group of women who
had people praying for them had a 50 percent pregnancy rate compared
to a 26 percent rate in the group of women who did not have people
praying for them. None of the women undergoing the IVF procedures
knew about the praying.

The researchers acknowledge the results seem incredible and say
unknown biological factors may be playing a role in the difference
between the two groups. But they decided to go public with the
results in the hope that other scientists may carry out studies to
determine if the findings are reproducible and, if so, what factors
might be responsible for the improved success rate in the group of
women who had people praying for them.

"We could have ignored the findings, but that would not help to
advance the field," says Dr. Rogerio Lobo, chairman of obstetrics and
gynecology (OB/GYN) at Columbia University College of Physicians &
Surgeons and lead author of the study.

"We are putting the results out there hoping to provoke discussion
and see if anything can be learned from it. We would like to
understand the biological or other phenomena that led to this almost
doubling of the pregnancy rate."

The study, which had several safeguards in place to eliminate bias,
involved 199 women planning in vitro fertilization and embryo
transfers at the Cha Hospital in Seoul, Korea, between December 1998
and March 1999. A statistician randomly assigned the prospective
mothers to either a prayer group (100 women) or a non-prayer group
(99). Besides the women, the physicians and medical personnel caring
for the women did not know a study of prayer was ongoing.

The people praying for the women lived in the United States, Canada,
and Australia and were incapable of knowing or contacting the women
undergoing the procedures. Which women were in which group was not
revealed until the pregnancy data became available at the completion
of the study. The people praying were from Christian denominations
and were separated into three groups. One group received pictures of
the women and prayed for an increase in their pregnancy rate. Another
group prayed to improve the effectiveness of the first group. A third
group prayed for the two other groups. Anecdotal evidence from other
prayer research has found this method to be most effective. The three
groups began to pray within five days of the initial hormone
treatment that stimulates egg development and continued to pray for
three weeks.

Besides finding a higher pregnancy rate among the women who had a
group praying for them, the researchers found older women seemed to
benefit more from prayer. For women between 30 and 39, the pregnancy
rate for the prayer group was 51 percent, compared with 23 percent
for the non-prayer group.

The researchers analyzed their data several ways to see if they could
find other variables that would have accounted for the differences
between the two groups. However, no adjustments altered the results.
The group will continue to study whether its findings are genuine
and, if so, what mechanisms might be at work.

Other studies have shown that prayer seems to exert a benefit for
heart patients. The researchers believe theirs is the first study
looking at prayer and infertility.

###

None of the researchers are employed by religious organizations and
were not asked by religious groups to perform the study. Dr. Kwang Y.
Cha, director of the Cha Hospital and an associate research scientist
at OB/GYN at Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons,
funded the research through his hospital.


---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to