31 results match your criteria: "The Institute for Integrative Health[Affiliation]"

Riley and Roy Respond.

Am J Public Health

October 2022

Carley Riley is with the Department of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, and the Division of Critical Care, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH. Brita Roy is with the Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, and the Department of Chronic Disease Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT. Both authors are also with the Nova Institute for Health (formerly The Institute for Integrative Health), Baltimore, MD.

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An immunogenomic phenotype predicting behavioral treatment response: Toward precision psychiatry for mothers and children with trauma exposure.

Brain Behav Immun

January 2022

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California San Francisco, United States; Center for Health and Community, University of California San Francisco, United States; Department of Pediatrics, Division of Developmental Medicine, University of California San Francisco, United States. Electronic address:

Inflammatory pathways predict antidepressant treatment non-response among individuals with major depression; yet, this phenomenon may have broader transdiagnostic and transtherapeutic relevance. Among trauma-exposed mothers (M = 32 years) and their young children (M = 4 years), we tested whether genomic and proteomic biomarkers of pro-inflammatory imbalance prospectively predicted treatment response (PTSD and depression) to an empirically-supported behavioral treatment. Forty-three mother-child dyads without chronic disease completed Child Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) for roughly 9 months.

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Early childhood and pregnancy are two sensitive periods of heightened immune plasticity, when exposure to adversity may disproportionately increase health risks. However, we need deeper phenotyping to disentangle the impact of adversity during sensitive periods from that across the total lifespan. This study examined whether retrospective reports of adversity during childhood or pregnancy were associated with inflammatory imbalance, in an ethnically diverse cohort of 53 low-income women seeking family-based trauma treatment following exposure to interpersonal violence.

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Objectives: Well-being is a holistic, positively framed conception of health, integrating physical, emotional, social, financial, community and spiritual aspects of life. High well-being is an intrinsically worthy goal for individuals, communities and nations. Multiple measures of well-being exist, yet we lack information to identify benchmarks, geographical disparities and targets for intervention to improve population life evaluation in the USA.

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Elective culinary medicine education has become popular to help fill important gaps in physician nutrition training. The implementation and outcomes among the inaugural cohort of medical students who received culinary medicine training as a required component of medical school curriculum at the University of Maryland School of Medicine are described. Following a series of elective pilot sessions, culinary medicine training was provided to all first-year medical students in the 2019-2020 academic year.

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Vegetable intake is far below recommendations among African-American adolescents living in economically-underserved urban areas. While the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) helps overcome access barriers, vegetable intake remains challenging and novel interventions are required. A two-year, multi-phase, school-based intervention was conducted at an urban, economically-underserved, and predominantly African-American high school in Baltimore, Maryland to determine whether stakeholder-informed addition of spices and herbs to NSLP vegetables would increase intake.

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Practitioners of Biofield Tuning assess health status of their clients by detecting off-the-body biofield perturbations using tuning fork (TF) vibrations. This study tested inter-rater agreement (IRA) on location of these perturbations. Three Biofield Tuning practitioners, in randomized order, identified locations of the 4-5 "strongest" perturbations along each of 4 sites for the same series of 10 research subjects.

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In response to the challenge of military traumatic brain injury and posttraumatic stress disorder, the US military developed a wide range of holistic care modalities at the new Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD, from 2001 to 2017, guided by civilian expert consultation via the Epidaurus Project. These projects spanned a range from healing buildings to wellness initiatives and healing through nature, spirituality, and the arts. The next challenge was to develop whole-body metrics to guide the use of these therapies in clinical care.

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Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with abnormalities in functional connectivity of a specific cortico-limbic network; however, less is known about white matter abnormalities providing structural connections for this network. This study investigated whether the diagnosis and symptoms of PTSD are associated with alterations in fractional anisotropy (FA), an index reflecting white matter organization, across six, a priori-defined tracts. White matter FA was quantified by diffusion tensor imaging using 3 T-MRI among 57 male, combat-exposed veterans with no history of moderate to severe head injuries or current alcohol dependence: 31 met criteria for PTSD and 26 were demographically comparable, combat-exposed controls without PTSD.

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A Summer Health Program for African-American High School Students in Baltimore, Maryland: Community Partnership for Integrative Health.

Explore (NY)

April 2018

Department of Family and Community Medicine, Center for Integrative Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Electronic address:

Context: Physical inactivity, poor nutrition, and chronic stress threaten the health of African-American youth in urban environments. Conditions often worsen in summer with diminished access to healthy foods and safe venues for physical activity.

Objective: A public-private partnership was formed to develop and evaluate an integrative health intervention entitled "Mission Thrive Summer" (MTS).

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Human subject effects on torsion pendulum oscillations: Importance of establishing the contribution of thermal convection air currents.

Explore (NY)

February 2021

Laboratory for the Advances in Consciousness & Health, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ; Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, AZ.

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Human Subject Effects on Torsion Pendulum Oscillations: Further Evidence of Mediation by Convection Currents.

Explore (NY)

June 2017

Laboratory for the Advances in Consciousness & Health, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ; Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, AZ.

Context: When a human subject sits beneath a wire mesh, hemispheric torsion pendulum (TP) a rapid-onset series of oscillations at frequencies both higher and lower than the fundamental frequency of the TP have been consistently observed.

Objective: This study was designed to replicate and extend prior findings that suggest the human subject effect on TP behavior is due to subject-generated, heat-induced convection currents.

Design: Effects on pendulum behavior were tested after draping an aluminized "space blanket" over the subject and by replacing the subject with a thermal mattress pad shaped to approximate the human form.

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Background: Chronic psychological stress is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and mortality. Circulating hematopoietic progenitor cells (CPCs) maintain vascular homeostasis, correlate with preclinical atherosclerosis, and prospectively predict cardiovascular events. We hypothesize that (1) chronic caregiving stress is related to reduced CPC number, and (2) this may be explained in part by negative interactions within the family.

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Purpose: To determine whether an experiential nutrition education intervention focusing on spices and herbs ("Spice MyPlate") is feasible and improves diet quality and healthy eating attitudes among an urban and predominantly African-American sample of adolescents more than standard nutrition education alone.

Design: A nonrandomized controlled trial compared standard nutrition education in U.S.

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Circulating angiogenic cell function is inhibited by cortisol in vitro and associated with psychological stress and cortisol in vivo.

Psychoneuroendocrinology

May 2016

Cardiovascular Research Institute, 555 Mission Bay Boulevard South, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States; Division of Cardiology, University of California, 505 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States; Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, University of California, San Francisco, 35 Medical Center Way, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States.

Article Synopsis
  • Psychological stress and glucocorticoids are linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, particularly affecting the function of circulating angiogenic cells (CACs), which are crucial for vascular repair.
  • In a study with 106 African American participants engaged in interracial interactions, it was found that heightened feelings of threat and anxiety correlated with decreased CAC migratory function.
  • Additionally, elevated cortisol levels following these stressful interactions were associated with impaired CAC sensitivity to glucocorticoids, suggesting a biological mechanism through which stress may exacerbate cardiovascular risks.
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Article Synopsis
  • Many individuals with obesity struggle with overeating, which complicates their efforts to lose weight, particularly due to reward-driven eating and psychological stress.
  • Mindfulness training may help by enhancing awareness of hunger signals and reducing stress, potentially leading to more effective weight loss strategies.
  • The SHINE trial found that mindfulness training significantly reduced reward-driven eating, which was linked to weight loss at the 12-month mark, although the effect diminished by 18 months, and psychological stress did not appear to influence weight loss outcomes.
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Research into acupuncture has had ripple effects beyond the field of acupuncture. This paper identifies five exemplars to illustrate that there is tangible evidence of the way insights gleaned from acupuncture research have informed biomedical research, practice, or policy. The first exemplar documents how early research into acupuncture analgesia has expanded into neuroimaging research, broadening physiologic understanding and treatment of chronic pain.

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Clinical Studies of Biofield Therapies: Summary, Methodological Challenges, and Recommendations.

Glob Adv Health Med

November 2015

Institute of Noetic Sciences, Petaluma, California; and Departments of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Urology, and Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Iowa, Iowa City (Dr Lutgendorf).

Biofield therapies are noninvasive therapies in which the practitioner explicitly works with a client's biofield (interacting fields of energy and information that surround living systems) to stimulate healing responses in patients. While the practice of biofield therapies has existed in Eastern and Western cultures for thousands of years, empirical research on the effectiveness of biofield therapies is still relatively nascent. In this article, we provide a summary of the state of the evidence for biofield therapies for a number of different clinical conditions.

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Biofield Physiology: A Framework for an Emerging Discipline.

Glob Adv Health Med

November 2015

Nature's Own Research Association, Dover, New Hampshire (Dr Oschman).

Biofield physiology is proposed as an overarching descriptor for the electromagnetic, biophotonic, and other types of spatially-distributed fields that living systems generate and respond to as integral aspects of cellular, tissue, and whole organism self-regulation and organization. Medical physiology, cell biology, and biophysics provide the framework within which evidence for biofields, their proposed receptors, and functions is presented. As such, biofields can be viewed as affecting physiological regulatory systems in a manner that complements the more familiar molecular-based mechanisms.

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Biofield Science and Healing: History, Terminology, and Concepts.

Glob Adv Health Med

November 2015

Department of Psychiatry and Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California, San Diego; Consciousness and Healing Initiative, San Diego (Dr Jain).

Biofield science is an emerging field of study that aims to provide a scientific foundation for understanding the complex homeodynamic regulation of living systems. By furthering our scientific knowledge of the biofield, we arrive at a better understanding of the foundations of biology as well as the phenomena that have been described as "energy medicine." Energy medicine, the application of extremely low-level signals to the body, including energy healer interventions and bio-electromagnetic device-based therapies, is incomprehensible from the dominant biomedical paradigm of "life as chemistry.

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Background: An increasing number of clinics offer complementary or integrative medicine services; however, clear guidance about how complementary medicine could be successfully and efficiently integrated into conventional health care settings is still lacking. Combining conventional and complementary medicine into integrative medicine can be regarded as a kind of merger. In a merger, two or more organizations - usually companies - are combined into one in order to strengthen the companies financially and strategically.

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Glucocorticoids contribute to obesity and metabolic syndrome; however, the mechanisms are unclear, and prognostic measures are unavailable. A systems level understanding of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-leptin axis may reveal novel insights. Eighteen obese premenopausal women provided blood samples every 10 min over 24 h, which were assayed for cortisol, adrenocorticotropin releasing hormone (ACTH) and leptin.

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Unlabelled: OBJECTIVE AND CONTEXT: This review was designed to assess the quality and review the outcomes of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of biofield therapies (external qigong, Healing Touch, Johrei, Reiki, and Therapeutic Touch) that report using only nonphysical touch forms of treatment. RCTs of nonphysical contact biofield therapies have the potential to contribute to an evidence base for health-promoting effects mediated through mechanisms outside the present understanding of biomedicine.

Methods: Articles meeting inclusion criteria were identified from database and reference list searches and evaluated for a range of reporting and design items.

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