hypnosis
Hypnosis Hypnotherapy Cork, Ireland Appointments
Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre, Cork, Ireland Appointment Scheduling
Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre will BE OPEN to accept client appointments for private one-to-one hypnosis hypnotherapy sessions.
Starting from Wednesday 1st July 2020.
For Hypnosis Hypnotherapy Cork, Ireland contact Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre if YOU desire:
- Stop Smoking Hypnosis
- Weight Control Hypnosis
- Hypnosis for Fears or Apprehensions
- Build Confidence Hypnosis
- Sports Hypnosis
- Hypnosis to Manage Situational Stress
- Hypnosis to Facilitate Wellness Mindset
- Hypnosis for Sleep Improvement
NOTE: Wearing a mask is required when attending appointments
If you experience any of the following symptoms please stay home.
- Fever
- Cough
- Shortness of Breath
- Sore Throat
- Headache
Book your private one-to-one appointment NOW!
Contact Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre, Cork, Ireland for more information:
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 021-4870870
Stop Smoking Hypnosis Cork Ireland
Stop Smoking Hypnosis Cork Ireland
When you are ready to stop smoking for good, then you are ready for hypnosis hypnotherapy. At Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre our professional goal is for you to stop smoking as soon as possible.
A specifically tailored Stop Smoking hypnosis hypnotherapy session is a powerful technique that can help you. Just like it has helped millions of other people to take back control and stop using tobacco, whether it’s cigarettes, e-cigarettes, cigars or pipe tobacco. Take back control and quit the habit, for good.
https://martinkielyhypnosis.com/stop-smoking-hypnosis/
Hypnosis may provide new option for ‘awake surgery’ for brain cancer
Hypnosedation for Brain Surgery – Press release by Wolters Kluwer Health
December 28, 2015 – Could hypnosis help to reduce the psychological trauma associated with “awake craniotomy” for brain cancers? A new “hypnosedation” technique offers a new alternative for patients undergoing awake surgery for gliomas, suggests a study in the January issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, published by Wolters Kluwer.
Initial evaluation shows a high rate of successful hypnosis in patients undergoing “awake craniotomy” for brain cancer (glioma), report Dr. Ilyess Zemmoura of Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Tours, France, and colleagues. They believe that hypnosedation might be especially valuable in patients with more advanced brain cancers.
Hypnosis Provides Sedation and Relaxation during ‘Awake’ Brain Surgery
Dr. Zemmoura and colleagues evaluated their hypnosis technique in 37 patients undergoing awake craniotomy, mainly for low-grade gliomas, between 2011 and 2015. In awake craniotomy, the patient is sedated but conscious so as to be able to communicate during the operation. This helps the surgeon navigate safely to the tumor without damaging the “eloquent cortex”–critical areas of the brain involved in language or movement.
Preparation for hypnosis began a few weeks before surgery. The anesthesiologist/hypnotist met with the patient to carry out a short hypnosis session and teach the patient how to create a “safe place”–an imaginary place where they can feel safe and effective.
In the operating room, patients were placed in a hypnotic trance; for example, they were instructed to “let go” and to “separate the mind and body.” The hypnotic experience was progressively enhanced during the first steps of surgery, including specific instructions and imagery for each potentially unpleasant or painful step of the surgery. (The online version of the article includes a detailed description and video of the hypnosedation procedure.)
The 37 patients underwent a total of 43 surgeries with hypnosedation (including repeat surgeries in patients with recurrent gliomas). Hypnosis failed in six patients, who underwent standard “asleep-awake-asleep” anesthesia. Another two patients decided not to undergo hypnosis.
When successful, hypnosis was a reliable and reproducible method for awake surgery, with questionnaire assessments showing little or no negative psychological impact. Rather than any measure of individual “hypnotizability,” the success of hypnosis seemed to be most strongly related to the patients’ motivation and determination.
Hypnosedation seemed to reduce the impact of unpleasant events during surgery. Some patients reported high stress levels, but this did not appear to affect their subjective experience of hypnosis. The one patient who showed signs of posttraumatic stress disorder after surgery had a particularly good experience with hypnosis.
For patients, the most unpleasant parts of surgery were steps involving noise and vibration. Pain seemed to decrease as the level of hypnosis deepened. Only two patients said they would not choose to undergo hypnosedation if they had to undergo a second awake craniotomy.
An important advantage of hypnosedation is that it allows the patient to remain awake throughout surgery. This avoids the need to awaken the patient in the middle of standard “asleep-awake-asleep” anesthesia–which can be especially challenging in patients with high-grade gliomas. The authors note that their experience included successful hypnosedation in two patients with high-grade gliomas.
While the initial evaluation is encouraging, Dr. Zemmoura and colleagues note that it provides no evidence that hypnosedation is superior to standard anesthesia. They also emphasize the considerable investment of time and commitment needed to prepare for and carry out their hypnosis technique: “It requires intense involvement and long training of the whole team, including the patient.”
Click here to read “Hypnosis for Awake Surgery of Low-grade Gliomas: Description of the Method and Psychological Assessment.”
Article: “Hypnosis for Awake Surgery of Low-grade Gliomas: Description of the Method and Psychological Assessment” (doi: 10.1227/NEU.0000000000000993)
Stop Smoking Hypnosis for pregnant Women in Ireland
13% of Irish Women Smoke Throughout Pregnancy
According to the Growing Up in Ireland study. In the report it was found that found women who experience a great deal of stress are much more likely to continue smoking, while poverty and poor education are also factors.
The aim of the research was to investigate the extent and distribution of three specific health behaviours among mothers in the prenatal and antenatal period.
The three specific areas they looked at were:
- Cigarette smoking in pregnancy
- Alcohol consumption in pregnancy
- Breastfeeding
The number of Irish women who smoke while pregnant has dropped from more than one in every four to fewer than one in every five, according to these latest figures.
The latest National Longitudinal Study of Children shows that the proportion of women smoking during pregnancy dropped from 28% in 1999 to 17% in 2007.
It found that 13% of women smoked all the way through pregnancy, even though smoking more than 11 cigarettes a day decreases a baby’s birth weight.
The study also found that compared to women in Britain, Irish women were significantly less likely to report drinking during pregnancy.
Most intelligent people know that smoking causes cancer, heart disease, and other major health problems. Smoking during pregnancy is especially harmful, causing additional health problems including premature birth, certain birth defects, and infant death.
Here are some facts about smoking and pregnancy:
- Smoking makes it harder for a woman to get pregnant.
- Women who smoke during pregnancy, are more likely than other women to have a miscarriage.
- Smoking can cause problems with the placenta—the source of the baby’s food and oxygen during pregnancy. For example, the placenta can separate from the womb too early, causing bleeding, which is dangerous to the mother and baby.
- Smoking during pregnancy can cause a baby to be born too early or to have low birth weight—making it more likely the baby will be sick and have to stay in the hospital longer. A few babies may even die.
- Smoking during and after pregnancy is a risk factor of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). SIDS is an infant death for which a cause of the death cannot be found.
- Babies born to women who smoke are more likely to have certain birth defects, like a cleft lip or cleft palate.
- There is no safe level of exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke. Breathing even a little secondhand smoke can be harmful. The only way to fully protect yourself and your loved ones from the dangers of other people’s smoke is through 100% smoke-free environments.
- Quitting smoking will help you feel better and provide a healthier environment for your baby.
When you stop smoking with hypnosis:
- Your baby will get more oxygen, even after just one day of not smoking.
There is less risk that your baby will be born too early. - There is a better chance that your baby will come home from the hospital with you.
- You will be less likely to develop heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, chronic lung disease, and other smoke-related diseases.
- You will have more energy and breathe more easily.
- You will have more money that you can spend on other things.
- You will feel good about what you have done for yourself and your baby.
- Quitting smoking can be difficult, but it is one of the best ways you can protect yourself and your baby’s health.
Stop Smoking Hypnosis for pregnant Women in Ireland
If you or someone you know wants to stop smoking with hypnosis hypnotherapy contact Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre for more information or to book an appointment.
Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre, Cork will provide you with professional specialized hypnosis services to help you succeed in becoming and remaining a non-smoker. Martin will teach you simple, effective and easy to use self-hypnosis exercises that many clients have successfully used to take back control over this area of their life.
Contact Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre Cork, Ireland, for more information.
Email: [email protected]
Tel: 021-4870870
Hypnotizing The Pain Away
This item on the use of hypnosis hypnotherapy for pain management appeared recently on CBS New York. The following is the video and article:
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — People have turned to hypnosis for help with everything from losing weight to quitting smoking.
Now, as CBS 2’s Maurice DuBois reported, hypnosis may also help relieve pain, including severe headaches and migraines.
“I expected abracadabra,” said Hedi White, a migraine sufferer.
But White said hypnosis is no trick, especially when it came to relieving her pain.
“It has really helped me,” she said.
White said she has tried just about every available treatment, but it’s through hypnosis that she learned to get control of her headaches at the onset, before they debilitate her.
“Do I experience the start of headaches? Yes.” she said. “Am I able to head them off? Yes.”
And she’s not alone.
“Hypnosis has helped many people,” said hypnotist Lisa Ludovici.
“In one session, I will teach them how powerful their mind is and how to lower their experience of pain,” she said.
Ludovici said hypnosis uses a guided relaxation and intense concentration to help a person’s attention become so focused that anything else that might be going on — including severe pain — is temporarily blocked out or ignored.
“The subconscious is open to positive suggestion and direction,” Ludovici said.
Dr. Dara Jamieson, director of the Headache Center at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, said studies show hypnosis can be beneficial in managing headaches, but it’s not a proven cure.
“I think hypnosis does play a role for some patients in managing episodic migraine,” she said.
“If an individual realizes that they are beginning to have a migraine headache, then self-hypnosis, as well as other types of relaxation and calming behaviors, can be used to try and abort the pain, as well as lessen the impact of accompanying symptoms,” Jamieson added.
The National Institute of Health reviewed several studies on hypnosis, concluding that it’s effective with some chronic pain, including tension headaches.
“I say to the skeptics, ‘What do you have to lose?’” White said. “It’s definitely a tool that I found very helpful.”
Hypnosis pain control
Before considering hypnosis pain control or hypnosis pain management please note:
A hypnotist hypnotherapist may not provide a medical diagnosis or recommend discontinuance of medically prescribed treatments. Before beginning hypnosis or hypnotherapy, clients who are currently receiving any form of medical treatment and are taking prescribed medication, must obtain a written referral or acknowledgement from their primary care giver. Clients will be informed immediately if another professional or an alternative means of reaching their objectives would serve them better.
Martin Kiely Hypnosis Centre Cork will provide you with professional specialized hypnosis pain control or pain management services. Martin will teach you simple, effective and easy to use self-hypnosis exercises that many clients have successfully used to take back control over this area of their life.
http://martinkielyhypnosis.com/hypnosis-pain-control-pain-management/