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The Effect of the 'Laying On of Hands' on Transplanted Breast Cancer in Mice

πŸ“„ Original study
Bengston, William F, Krinsley, David β€’ 2000 Modern Era β€’ healing

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

Researchers injected mice with a breast cancer strain that is 100% fatal within weeks. Then untrained volunteers (many of them skeptics!) held their hands near cages for an hour daily. The results were stunning: across 33 treated mice, nearly 88% achieved complete remission. Tumors blackened, collapsed inward, and healed, and mice lived full lifespans. Recovered mice became immune when re-injected, suggesting healing worked through the immune system. Here's where it gets weird: control mice at the same facility also started remitting at 69%, while controls shipped to another city all died on schedule. Was this a design flaw or evidence that healing spreads beyond intended targets? That remains the central puzzle, and no one outside Bengston's group has replicated these findings.

Research Notes

Foundational paper of Bengston's healing research program, predating his 2010 editorial. The recurrent 'control contamination' pattern β€” on-site controls remitting when observed by healers β€” is the central methodological problem and theoretical ambiguity: either a design flaw or evidence of nonlocal healing. No statistical analysis reported; comparison with Beseme et al. 2018 (molecular biology of intention on cancer) illustrates the methodological evolution of this research line. Not independently replicated outside Bengston's group.

Four experiments at Queens College and St. Joseph's College tested whether 'laying on of hands' techniques could cure transplanted mammary adenocarcinoma (H2712 strain) in mice facing 100% predicted fatality within 14–27 days. Bengston and trained skeptical volunteers placed hands outside cages for 1 hour/day. The tumors developed a blackened area, ulcerated, imploded, and closed; mice lived their full lifespans. Across 33 experimental mice, 87.9% achieved complete remission. On-site controls that were observed by healers remitted at 69.2%; off-site controls sent to another city died 100%. Histological analysis found viable cancer cells throughout remission stages, suggesting an immune-mediated response. Reinjected remitted mice showed immunity to the same cancer. Stated belief in healing was not required to produce the effect.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Bengston, William F, Krinsley, David (2000). The Effect of the 'Laying On of Hands' on Transplanted Breast Cancer in Mice. Journal of Scientific Exploration.
BibTeX
@article{bengston_2000_laying_on_hands,
  title = {The Effect of the 'Laying On of Hands' on Transplanted Breast Cancer in Mice},
  author = {Bengston, William F and Krinsley, David},
  year = {2000},
  journal = {Journal of Scientific Exploration},
}