By
Steve Wells, Kathryn A. Polglase,
Henry B. Andrews, Patricia Carrington and Harvey Baker
Introduction
by Patricia Carrington, PhD
Irrational
fears of specific objects or situations such as insects,
snakes, small animals, elevators, bridges, tunnels, or
others, are among the most widespread fears reported
according to surveys of the general population.
Addressing this important category of fears, Steve Wells
and his associates in
Australia
conducted a ground breaking study on the use of EFT
(Emotional Freedom Techniques) for
the treatment of specific phobias of small animals and
insects which will be the first controlled study of a
meridian–based intervention ever to be published in a
leading peer reviewed journal.
To
appreciate the importance of this you need to know that
while the energy psychology methods, of which EFT
(Emotional Freedom Techniques) is in
the forefront, have the potential of revolutionizing the
way that psychotherapy is practiced worldwide, in
addition to their use for medical and educational
purposes, there is one major difficulty in the way of
this (besides the problem of acceptance by the “Old
Guard” which is always present). This is the
fact that we have as yet no systematic body of research
in this area to cite as a basis for further studies when
applying for grants or submitting to journals, or for
achieving acceptance within our society’s
institutions. Without this we can be stopped in our
tracks before we can really get moving.
The
Wells et al. study therefore opens a door to serious
research in energy psychology that was hitherto closed
and represents, in this sense, a landmark. It will, of
course, need to be followed by more extensive research
to have a significant impact on the scientific
community, but as an opening wedge, it is of historical
importance.
For
this reason I am proud to have taken part in the
preparation and writing of the journal article reporting
the Wells’ study, the final version of which is to be
published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology.
It was a long and at times difficult journey, but one
well worth having taken.
The
Wells et al. research is formally summarized in the
abstract below. In essence, Steve Wells and his
team in
Australia
studied
the effect of EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) on phobias of small animals and
insects by comparing it with the effect of a deep
breathing technique on the same phobias. The deep
breathing method used identical reminder phrases and the
other portions of the protocol used in EFT — the only
major difference between the two techniques as they were
used here being that during EFT (Emotional Freedom
Techniques) the participants tapped
on acupoints, and in the
comparison condition they used deep diaphragmatic
breathing. This was an excellent research design because
almost all factors in the two conditions were held
equal, including participant expectations. As a
result, the salient feature which differentiated the two
conditions was that one involved EFT tapping and the
other didn't.
What
did Steve and his colleagues actually find? First, and
not surprisingly, they discovered that deep breathing is
in itself apparently quite beneficial for the treatment
of such phobias, a fact which made it difficult for EFT
(Emotional Freedom Techniques)
to come out better in this test (think how easy it would
have been to show EFT's
superiority if, say, the comparison group had watched a
videotape on relaxation instead) Despite this
obvious handicap, however, EFT came out way ahead on 4
of the 5 measures used (both treatments produced similar
results in pulse rate).
While
each of the groups improved significantly following
their respective "treatments" —the EFT
(Emotional Freedom Techniques) participants improved significantly MORE than did the
deep breathing group on the 4 subjective and behavioral
measures. What is more, on the crucial behavioral
test (measuring how close the person dared to walk
toward their feared animal before, and then after
whichever treatment they were given) the EFT
participants held their gains far better than did the
deep breathing subjects when the groups were re-assessed
6 to 9 months after they had learned their technique. In
other words, the findings suggest that those people
who act less fearful right after learning EFT, with
respect to a feared object, continue to act less fearful
of that animal even after a long passage of time during
which they have not used EFT. In other words — the
effects of EFT last.
Below
is the formal description of this study
The details must wait until you read the actual
paper which will be published in September or October of
this year. Only then will you be able to
appreciate the meticulous care that went into this
study.
With
warmest wishes,
Patricia
Carrington, Ph.D.
EFT Contributing Editor
Summary
of the Pilot Study
Abstract
This
study explored whether a meridian-based procedure,
Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT), can reduce specific
phobias of small animals under laboratory-controlled
conditions. Randomly assigned participants were treated
individually for 30 minutes with EFT (n = 18) or a
comparison condition, Diaphragmatic Breathing (DB) (n =
17). ANOVAS revealed that EFT produced significantly
greater improvement than did DB behaviorally and on
three self-report measures, but not on pulse rate. The
greater improvement for EFT was maintained, and possibly
enhanced, at 6 - 9 months follow-up on the behavioral
measure. These findings suggest that a single treatment
session using EFT to reduce specific phobias can produce
valid behavioral and subjective effects. Some
limitations of the study are also noted and clarifying
research suggested.
Can
be cited as follows:
Wells,
S., Polglase, K., Andrews, H.B.,
Carrington, P. and Baker, A.H. Evaluation of a
Meridian-Based intervention, Emotional Freedom
Techniques (EFT), for reducing specific phobias of small
animals. Journal of Clinical
Psychology (in press).
I
send my warmest wishes to all of you involved in this
exciting new field at this crucial point in its history.
Return
to Research Menu
Steve Reed is
an EFT
- Emotional Freedom Techniques therapist / practitioner,
and trainer for EFT, offering seminars and
workshops in the Dallas area. EFT (Emotional Freedom
Techniques) are clinically proven effective treatments
for trauma, abuse, panic, anxiety, fears, phobias,
depression, addiction, child related issues, and
symptoms like physical pain, allergies, headaches,
breathing difficulties, and more. Learn EFT (Emotional
Freedom techniques) for healing and relief.
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