By Jamie Zimmerman from abc NEWS
Yale graduate student Michelle Morgan started smoking at age 12. When the 35-year-old wanted to quit she tried everything from cold turkey to medications, but nothing worked.
Then Morgan saw a flyer for a research study on mindfulness-based smoking cessation. She qualified and enrolled.
In weekly sessions Dr. Judson Brewer, associate professor of medicine psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, taught Morgan to smoke “mindfully” by keeping a journal about how she experienced the taste of the cigarette, its odors and her bodily sensations and cravings while she smoked.
Morgan thought this was ridiculous.
“I remember thinking this is hokey and it’s not going to work,” she recalled.
Yet, when prompted to quit several weeks into the trial, Morgan smoked her last cigarette. That was 4 years ago.
According to Brewer’s research, Morgan isn’t alone in her success.
In randomized controlled trials, mindful techniques were more than twice as effective American Lung Association’s Freedom from Smoking treatment, the current gold standard. And Brewer claimed he has demonstrated that mindful awareness training is at least as effective as current treatments with helping patients quit alcohol, cocaine, and gambling.
However, Dr. Peter Shields, the deputy director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Ohio State University is skeptical.
“Most people who quit, quit on their own,” Shields, who is also a spokesman for the American Association for Cancer Research said. “It’s fine if they find journaling and meditation helpful but at this point in time that’s not what’s been shown to be effective.”
On the other hand, Jean Kristeller, Ph.D., professor emeritus at Indiana State University and co-founder of The Center for Mindful Eating, is among a growing cadre of psychiatrists and scientists who think that training the mind can be very effective for helping people change a host of behaviors, including kicking the habit.
This is great, technically if you could mimic the effects cigarettes had on your body, for example raised blood pressure, pressures on the body, with meditation, then one could simply with thought give themselves a high.