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Prayer produces miracles
You don't have to just take this by blind faith. Scientific
studies provide
ample evidence that prayer works. Here are some noteworthy quotes:
Reader's Digest, - Dec. 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer: Have a little
faith-and lower your risk of depression, heart disease and more" |
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"...in...Yale University School of Medicine doctors reported
that poor people...who believed in a higher power were less likely
than their nonspiritual peers to be depressed..."
"Doctors at Italy's University of Pavia found that adults
who [prayed] had improved lung and heart function. In a study of
999 cardiac patients from Mid America Heart Institute of St. Luke's
Hospital, those who unknowingly had others praying for them fared
better than those heart patients who didn't receive intercessory
prayers."
"...studies have shown that prayer promotes healing post-surgery." |
Duke University Medical Center Prayer Study |
| Dr. Mitch Krucoff, of Duke University Medical
Center is renowned for his writings and research on spirituality
and medicine and was the principal investigator of Duke's groundbreaking
prayer study. This study was important because, "of all patients
tested, the lowest absolute patient complications were observed
in patients assigned to offsite prayer...."
"...Even though Prayer has existed in every spiritual tradition,
only recently has science begun to validate that prayer 'works,'
which in the field of medicine means that patients who are prayed
over recover faster and have fewer complications from serious illness."
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Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"In 1998, Harold G. Koenig, M.D.,
professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Duke University
Medical Center, released a study of 4,000 older adults that concluded
that those who prayed daily...had 40percent less hypertension than
those who didn't."
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Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"...John Astin, Ph.D., of the California
Pacific Medical Center, in San Francisco, published a paper in the
Annals of Internal Medicine reviewing studies on prayer...concluding
that 57 percent of the studies showed a positive treatment effect." |
Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"...Edward Creagan, M.D., an oncologist
and a professor at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, in Rochester,
Minnesota, says he has seen amazing regressions in cancer patients
who pray. 'I have the CAT scans and the biology and pathology reports,
and there's no medical or statistical reason that a group of patients
is alive,' he contends. By interviewing the patients, he believes
he's uncovered a consistent theme: 'Each of those patients reached
out to a higher power.'" |
BP News - April 14, 2004 |
"Chaplain's service in Iraq abounds with
faith & miracles" |
"Lt. Carey Cash, a chaplain with his
battalion...in [his] new book, 'A Table in the Presence'...takes
his readers into the hot, dusty, Iraq battlefield to learn how God
worked miracles and answered prayers in individual [Marine's] lives..." |
The Healing Power of Prayer - November 29, 1998 |
By PARKER LEE NASH, Staff Writer |
"Duke University doctors, studying
the nontraditional influences on healing, lumped about 20 heart
patients into a 'prayer group'. The patients didn't know it, but
their names were listed on prayer requests sent to places like Nepal,
Jerusalem and Baltimore, where people of different faiths prayed
for their recovery.
Those prayers worked, doctors say. Patients in the 'prayer group'
performed 50 to 100 percent better than patients who weren't the
prayer targets."
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Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"...medical schools are now putting
it on their curricula. Across America, about 65 percent of medical
schools now offer classes in spirituality. 'We're educating students
about looking at the traditions and communities of faith and what
support roles they can play during an illness,' says Stuart Varon,
M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins School
of Medicine in Baltimore." |
The Healing Power of Prayer - November 29, 1998 |
By PARKER LEE NASH, Staff Writer |
"The first major study that looked
at prayer and its healing effects was published in 1988 in the Southern
Medical Journal. Dr. Randy Bird, a cardiologist at the University
of California, followed the progress of 393 patients with chest
pain and heart trouble. He divided tem into two groups. One was
prayed for. One was not.
Three people in the prayed-for group required treatment with antibiotics,
compared to 17 patients in the group not targeted with prayer. Those
who were prayed for also used respirators less and suffered fewer
instances of congestive heart failure.
Studies since then also have shown that prayer seems to work, even
when the prayers are offered up from very far away places and from
people of different faiths, as in the Duke study."
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Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"'It's time to stop asking if religion
is linked to better health', says Michael E. McCullough, Ph.D.,
associate professor of psychology...at the University of Miami.
'It's time to accept that it is and ask how and why'...Of the one-third
of Americans who pray for health concerns, 75 percent ask for overall
good health, while 22 percent request relief from specific conditions,
according to a 2004 study published in the Archives of Internal
Medicine."
"In Dr. McCaffrey's study, 69 percent of those who prayed
for their health said they felt it worked, while in a 1997 Yankelovich
survey, 99 percent of family doctors said spiritual practices enhance
medical treatment."
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MSWM.Org |
"A Doctor Answers Questions on Faith Healing"
by Dr. A. Wageneaar of Hilversum, Holland (medical superintendent,
Orchidee Hospital, Hilversum) |
"Every physician knows that spontaneous
miracles do occur. You will be interested to know that spontaneous
healings have been reported in patients who suffer from cancer.
This has been publicized several times in medical journals. Medical
science has admitted that miracles do occur after the prayer of
faith." |
The Healing Power of Prayer - November 29, 1998 |
By PARKER LEE NASH, Staff Writer |
"Dr. Elisabeth Targ, a psychiatrist
at the California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, recruited
40 AIDS patients for a study and found that half who received prayers-from
places as far away as Alaska and Puerto Rico-required fewer hospitalizations
and doctor's visits.
In two similar studies this year involving another set of AIDS
patients, Targ recorded significantly better health in patients
who received prayers than in patients who didn't."
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PLIM.org - 1999 PLIM REPORT, Vol. 8 #4 |
"Scientific Research of Prayer: Can the Power
of Prayer Be Proven?" by Debra Williams, D.D. |
"One of the most quoted scientific
studies of prayer was done between August of 1982 and May of 1983.
393 Patients in the San Francisco General Hospital's Coronary Care
Unit participated in a double blind study to assess the therapeutic
effects of intercessory prayer. All participants in the study including
patients, doctors, and the conductor if the study himself remained
blind throughout the study. To guard against biasing the study,
the patients were not contacted again after it was decided which
group would be prayed for, and which group would not."
"The results of the study are not surprising to those of us
who believe in the power of prayer. The patients who had received
prayer as a part of the study were healthier than those who had
not. The prayed for group had less need of having CPR(cardiopulmonary
resuscitation) performed and less need for the use of mechanical
ventilators. They had a diminished necessity for diuretics and antibiotics,
less occurrences of pulmonary edema, and fewer deaths. Taking all
factors into consideration, these results can only be attributed
to the power of prayer."
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Irishhealth.com |
"The power of prayer..." by Dr. Leonard
Condren, Irishhealth.com |
"In 1982 a landmark study was conducted
over a ten-month period in San Francisco General Hospital. The study
focused on the effects of prayer on a group of 393 patients in the
hospital's coronary care unit. I have called this study a landmark
study because it was one of the first of its kind and it followed
the strict formula of a double blind, randomized controlled trial...The
study focused on the impact of the prayer of intercessors and not
have the power of praying oneself...the people in the coronary care
unit did not know of they were being prayed for or not and the researchers
gathering the data were equally blind on this point...A good outcome
was more frequent on those that were prayed for than those that
were not prayed for...cardiac arrest, heart failure, pneumonia,
intubation and ventilation were less frequent in the 'prayed for'
group." |
Irishhealth.com |
"The power of prayer..." by Dr. Leonard
Condren, Irishhealth.com |
"...the American Heart Journal studied
the effect of intercessory prayer on a group of150 patients undergoing
angioplasty with stent insertion...The people under study were randomly
assigned to receive intercessory prayer...Those in the 'prayed for'
group experienced fewer complications than any of the other people..." |
The Jewish Theological Seminary - December 12, 2004 |
"Science or Miracle?
Holiday Survey Reveals Physicians' Views of Faith, Prayer and Miracles" |
"New York, NY, December 21, 2004-A
national survey of 1,100 physicians, conducted by HCD Research and
the Louis Finkelstein Institute for Religious and Social Studies
of the Jewish Theological Seminary...found that 74% of doctors believe
that miracles have occurred in the past and 73% believe that can
occur today."
"Those surveyed represent physicians from Christian (Roman
Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox Christian and other), Jewish (Orthodox,
Conservative, Reform and secular) Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist religious
traditions."
"The on line survey has a plus or minus 2.9 percent margin
or error at a 95 percent level of confidence."
"Perhaps the most surprising result of the survey is that
a majority of doctors (55%) said that they have seen treatment results
in their patients that they would consider miraculous...67% encourage
their patients to pray." |
DenverPost.com - Oct. 16, 2004 |
Book Review: Healing Words - The Power of Prayer
and the Practice of Medicine |
"Santa Fe internist Larry Dossey...
advanced the idea that when it comes to getting well, prayer is
as valid a tool as-though not a replacement for-drugs or surgery." |
Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"William Harris, Ph.D., a researcher
at Mid America Heart Institute, in Kansas City, Missouri, studied
990 randomly assigned cardiac patients over a one-year period. Unknown
to the participants, off-site prayer groups given only their first
names prayed for half of them. At the end of the study, the group
that was prayed for had 11 percent improved outcomes, including
fewer complications. Dr. Harris calls the results statistically
significant: 'A lot of people pray for others in the hospital. Does
it do any good? Based on our study, it does.'"
"...in a 2001 infertility study, in which U.S., Canadian and
Australian groups prayed fro women in Seoul, Korea, who were using
in-vitro fertilization. The prayed-for group had a 50 percent higher
pregnancy rate."
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Ladies' Home Journal - December 2004 |
"The Healing Power of Prayer" by Kathryn
Casey |
"...Dr. Benson's Mind/Body Medical
Institute...has used meditation prayer...successfully to treat stress-related
complaints, high blood pressure, migraines and backaches." |
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