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EFT Research

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The EFT Study by
Wells, et al.
Published research on EFT’s effectiveness
commences appropriately enough with a carefully executed study that addresses
irrational fears. When Australian psychologist, Steve Wells, and his
associates decided to investigate the use of EFT they chose to look at its
effect on specific phobias of small animals such as rats and mice and insects
such as spiders and cockroaches that often cause distress in humans.
The ensuing research, commonly known as “The
Wells Study”, opened a door to research in energy psychology and I (P.
Carrington) am proud to have taken part in the preparation and writing of the
journal article on the Wells Study that was eventually published in a leading
peer-reviewed journal, The Journal of Clinical Psychology. It
was a long and at times difficult journey to reach publication but it was one
well worth having taken.
Here is how the Wells study was constructed and
what it showed.
Because
research protocol demands that if possible a method studied be compared with
another method so that we have benchmarks against which to measure its
effectiveness, Steve Wells and his research team decided to compare the
effects of EFT with those of a deep breathing technique which would also
address the fears of small animals and insects in their participants. The
deep breathing method they designed included identical reminder phrases and
almost all the other components of the standard EFT protocol, the only major
difference between the two techniques being the fact that during EFT the
participants tapped on meridian end points, and in the comparison condition
they did not tap at all.
Perhaps not
surprisingly, the research suggests that deep breathing is in itself quite
beneficial for the treatment of these types of phobias, a fact which, in fact,
made it difficult for EFT to come out ahead in this experimental contest
(think how easy it would have been to show EFT’s superiority if, say, the
comparison group had watched a videotape instead!). Despite this handicap,
however, EFT surpassed the breathing technique on four of the five measures
used (both treatments produced similar results in pulse rate). The differences
between the two techniques were striking and statistically highly significant.
How well did this improvement hold up over
time? In the crucial test which measured how close a person dared to walk
toward their feared object, the EFT participants held onto their gains much
better than did the deep breathing subjects when the groups were retested
again 6 to 9 months after they had learned their respective techniques. Those
people who had become less fearful right after learning EFT, tended to
continue to act less afraid of their feared animal even after a long passage
of time during which they had not been using EFT. In other
words, the beneficial effects of EFT turned out to be remarkably lasting.
What is
particularly striking about this finding is the fact that all 35 participants
in the study had received only one single 30 minute session of EFT, or
of diaphragmatic breathing.. Because they were not taught to use these
techniques during the long waiting interval, it is quite remarkable that the
improvement obtained through EFT was maintained and even possibly intensified
as long as 9 months later when these subjects were again asked to approach
their feared object.
In summary, the Wells study showed that EFT is
an effective and long lasting treatment for specific phobias, even when it is
administered only once and for only 30 minutes.
REFERENCE:
Wells, S.,
Polglase, K., Andrews, H.B., Carrington, P., & Baker, A.H. (2003). Evaluation
of a Meridian Based Intervention, Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT), for
Reducing Specific Phobias of Small Animals. Journal of Clinical Psychology,
Vol. 59(9), 943-966
To
download a copy of the full journal article go to:
http://www.eftdownunder.com/docs/EFTStudy.htm
.
The Wells Study Replicated
When new
research is published, the scientific community tends to be skeptical until
another group of researchers in a different laboratory are able to reproduce
the results of the first study, showing that it was not just chance alone that
produced the original results.
Dr .A. Harvey
Baker, Professor of Psychology at Queens College in New York City, set out to
accomplish the task of replicating the Wells Study. He decided to design a
study which would match as closely as possible the conditions of the Wells
study, yet be even more stringent. It is always possible to improve on any
piece of research and Dr. Baker and his research associate Linda Siegel did so
with their new study.
Since it is preferable in research to have not
only a comparison group as Wells did, but also a no-treatment control group
against which to compare the results of the method being studied, Baker and
Siegel added a third group in which participants were asked to sit in the
laboratory for the same duration as that of the EFT condition, either studying
or passing the time by reading magazines provided for them, none of which
dealt with fears. Adding this control group was designed to show whether the
mere passage of time would improve subjects’ fears without their having
practiced EFT or any other therapeutic technique.
In addition,
the researchers chose as their other active condition, a more commonly used
method for handling fears than the diaphragmatic breathing technique used in
the Wells Study. This method closely approximated Carl Rogers’ nondirective
counseling approach, and they called it the Supportive Interview.
The 31 people who participated in this new study
were randomly assigned to one of these three experimental conditions, and the
study added the feature of having the person testing the subjects be "blind"
as to whether each subject had been taught EFT or one of the other two
conditions. Another important difference between the two studies was the fact
that the average interval between the initial testing (before subjects learned
EFT) and the final testing, was 1.38 years, almost twice as long as the
waiting period in the Wells study.
Just as Wells had done, Baker and Siegel
purposely did not instruct their subjects to practice EFT during the waiting
interval ––they were allowed only one 45 minute treatment session. It is
therefore interesting that although the initial effects of EFT did show some
shrinkage over time, they did not disappear during the lengthy time
interval between the original testing and the follow-up one, one and one third
years later.
The results of the Baker-Siegel study and the
Wells study therefore show that EFT has not only immediate but long-term
efficacy. EFT’s usefulness for a specific phobia has now been replicated in
two independent studies conducted in geographically very distant parts of the
world.
REFERENCE
A. Harvey Baker, Ph.D. and
Linda Siegel, (2003) Can a 45
minute session of EFT lead to reduction of intense fear of rats, spiders and
water bugs?” –– a replication and extension of the Wells et al. (2003)
laboratory Study. Paper presented at
at the annual
meeting of the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology. Baltimore, MD.
A. Harvey
Baker. (2008) An Updated Analysis of the Results of the Baker-Siegel Study.
Personal Communication to the Author.
EFT and
Post Traumatic Stress
Moving into a
different area of research, a Canadian study targeted the physiological
effects of EFT as well as its psychological ones.
Posttraumatic stress can be serious complication
following any form of accident. In a study published in The Journal of
Subtle Energies & Energy Medicine, a Canadian research team
consisting of psychologists Paul G. Swingle and Lee Pulos, and
Mara K. Swingle,
chose to study 9 victims of motor vehicle accidents who were reporting severe
traumatic stress following these accidents. These people suffered from
intense anxiety when having to ride in a car, nightmares, headaches and other
symptoms typical of those who have experienced a traumatic incident.
The researchers administered both psychological
tests and physiological measurements to these accident victims. In their
first contact with the participants, they used what is called a QEEG which
recorded and analyzed brain waves to determine the effects of EFT treatment on
brain activity associated with specific mental and physical states. They also
administered a series of psychological tests to the participants.
After they were studied in the laboratory, the
participants received two one-hour sessions of EFT. Following these
treatments, they were given take-home treatment instructions for use during
the duration of the research project in which they were asked to practice EFT
five times a day for the first week, and fewer times per day thereafter.
When they were initially tested (before they had
learned EFT) these subjects’ average subjective ratings of distress had been
8.3 on a 0 to 10 point scale of intensity when they were thinking about their
accident (with 0 being completely at ease and 10 being as anxious as the
subjects could imagine being). However, after they had been treated with EFT,
their average intensity rating had come down to 2.5 on the Intensity Scale,
showing a marked improvement in their distress ratings after experiencing EFT.
After an interval of between 70 and 160 days had
passed following the EFT treatments, the participants were then retested on a
neurophysiological level and again filled out the same psychological
questionnaires they had filled out before they had learned EFT. At this time,
the group as a whole showed a significant improvement as measured by the
questionnaires. However these measurements also revealed an unusual division
among the 9 participants with regard to how well they retained the
effects of EFT. Although all participants had recorded a positive change
immediately following their EFT treatments (a change that showed only one
chance in a thousand of being by chance alone) the improvements did not hold
up over time for all the participants. For 5 of the 9 participants
these changes held up excellently, but for 4 of them they did not remain on
retestl
.
The results from the brain mapping analyses at
the time of the follow-up testing corroborated the results of the
psychological questionnaires. Again, the group seemed to split roughly in
half with regard to those whose improvement held up well and those for whom
the improvement had vanished.
Unfortunately in this study no assessment was
made of how well the participants had complied with the rules of the study by
doing EFT regularly at home. Compliance (or lack of it) may have been the
deciding factor here in terms of who did and didn’t benefit from EFT over the
long term. It will be up to future research to tease out the answer to this.
REFERENCE.
Swingle, P.,
Pulos, L. & Swingle, M. (2005).
Journal of Subtle Energies &
Energy Medicine. 15,
75-86..
Using EFT
for Seizures in Children
In another
study, Dr. Swingle used EFT as a treatment for children diagnosed with
epilepsy. The subjects were 25 preschool children who were at high risk if
they took anti-seizure medication because of their very young age., Their
parents were anxious to find a method of controlling the seizures that did not
involve medications and were eager to have their children participate in this
study.
The children
admitted to the study were administered EFT by their parents every time each
day that the parents suspected a seizure might occur. The results were
striking. Dr. Swingle found significant reductions in seizure frequency among
these very young children, as well as extensive clinical improvement in the
children's EEG readings after exposure to two weeks of daily in home EFT
treatment.
Dr. Swingle
cautions, however, that, as with many other relaxation techniques, EFT may
cause an occasional patient to experience exacerbation of their seizure
condition rather than to lessen it. Fortunately he has a identified a means
of counteracting this rare adverse side effect by having the patient listen to
a specially designed audiotape each time before they use EFT. This strategy
seems to reduce or completely eliminate the danger. The tape can be ordered
from Dr. Swingle whose contact information is given below. While this side
effect may be rare, prudence would suggest that this caution should be
exercised.
REFERENCE
Swingle, P, & Swingle, M.
(May, 2000) Effects of the Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) method on
seizure frequency in children diagnosed with epilepsy. Paper presented at the
annual meeting of the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology, Las
Vegas, Nevada.
Contact:
Dr. Paul Swingle. Phone: 604-608-0444
Using EFT
With Large Groups of People
A larger
scale study of EFT’s effects studied 102 persons and I (P. Carrington) was
present when a portion of the study was conducted.
At that time
I was attending one of Gary Craig’s major EFT conferences and watched with
interest as psychologist Jack Rowe diligently sought out the participants who
had signed up for his study -- most of the people in the room actually -- to
hand them their test forms for the SCL 90-R, a highly respected measure of
psychological distress. His purpose in doing so was to study the effects of
EFT on the stress levels of the audience. In particular, he wanted to find
out whether any effects that might emerge would hold up when these people were
retested six months later.
Jack's article reporting these results was
published in the journal, Counseling and Clinical Psychology. Here, in
brief, is what he did, and found.
The SCL-90-R test was administered to the
participating workshop members on 5 different occasions. The participants
first took the test one month before the workshop commenced (it had been sent
to them in the mail); again at the beginning of the workshop: at the end of
the workshop: and again one month, and then six months after the workshop.
This test can be re-administered numerous times and retain its validity as a
measure of current level of stress, one of the reasons it was chosen for the
study.
What exactly did Jack Rowe find?
The results of the study showed a highly
significant decrease in all measures of psychological distress as assessed by
the SCL-90-R from pre-workshop to immediately after the workshop was
finished. There was such a large drop in stress levels that it could have
been obtained by chance alone only 5 times out of 10,000,. Equally important,
however, were the findings from the 6 months retesting which showed that the
decrease in stress observed right after the workshop held up strongly at this
later time. Although slightly attenuated at this time as might be expected,
the gains made at the workshop were still holding up, with the improvements
still highly significant statistically (5 chances in 10,000 of these results
being by chance alone).
As in all research, there is more to be done by
future researchers There was no official comparison group of similar people
who did not learn EFT, and Gary Craig himself conducted the sessions. Would
another group leader have obtained similar results using this technique? This
is the type of question we typically find in research, and at the time of this
writing another group of researchers are beginning to replicate Jack Rowe's
findings. Their study will undoubtedly give us some of these answers when
completed. As it stands, the Rowe study supports the other research which
shows that EFT is a technique that has long lasting results.
REFERENCE:
Jack E.
Rowe.. (2005).
Counseling & Clinical
Psychology Journal,
Vol. 2 Issue 3, 104-111.
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