Preliminary Report of the First Large-Scale Study of Energy Psychology
By Joaquin Andrade, MD and David Feinstein, PhD
The research, which was initiated in the late 1980s and included various studies over a 14-year period, was published in 2004
in an appendix to David Feinstein's Energy Psychology Interactive: Rapid Interventions
for Lasting Change (Ashland, OR: Innersource).
SUMMARY
In preliminary clinical trials involving more than 29,000 patients from 11 allied treatment centres in
South America during a 14-year period, a variety of randomized, double-blind pilot studies were conducted. In one of these, approximately 5,000
patients diagnosed at intake with an anxiety disorder were randomly assigned to an experimental group (tapping) or a control group (Cognitive
Behaviour Therapy/medication) using standard randomization tables and, later, computerized software. Ratings were given by independent clinicians
who interviewed each patient at the close of therapy, at 1 month, at 3 months, at 6 months, and at 12 months. The raters made a determination of
complete remission of symptoms, partial remission of symptoms, or no clinical response. The raters did not know if the patient received
CBT/medication or tapping. They knew only the initial diagnosis, the symptoms, and the severity, as judged by the intake staff. At the close of
therapy:
63% of the control group were judged as having improved.
90% of the experimental group were judged as having improved.
51% of the control group were judged as being symptom free.
76% of the experimental group were judged as symptom free.
At one-year follow-up, the patients receiving tapping treatments were less prone to relapse or partial relapse than those
receiving CBT/medication, as indicated by the independent raters assessments and corroborated by brain imaging and neurotransmitter
profiles. In a related pilot study by the same team, the length of treatment was substantially shorter with energy therapy and related
methods than with CBT/medication (mean = 3 sessions vs. mean = 15 sessions).
If subsequent research corroborates these early findings, it will be a notable development since CBT/medication is currently
the established standard of care for anxiety disorders and the greater effectiveness of the energy approach suggested by this study would
be highly significant. The preliminary nature of these findings must, however, be emphasized. The study was initially envisioned as an
in-house assessment of a new method and was not designed with publication in mind. Not all the variables that need to be controlled in
robust research were tracked, not all criteria were defined with rigorous precision, the record-keeping was relatively informal, and source
data were not always maintained. Nonetheless, the studies all used randomized samples, control groups, and double blind assessment. The
findings were so striking that the team decided to report them. The principal investigator was Joaqumn Andrade, M.D. The report was written by Dr. Andrade and David Feinstein, Ph.D. The
paper will appear in Energy Psychology Interactive: An Integrated Book and CD Program
for Learning the Fundamentals of Energy Psychology (Ashland, OR: Innersource, in press, distributed by Norton Professional
Books) by David Feinstein in consultation with Fred P. Gallo, Donna Eden, and the Energy
Psychology Interactive Advisory Board.
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