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Compassionate Intention as a Therapeutic Intervention by Partners of Cancer Patients: Effects of Distant Intention on the Patients’ Autonomic Nervous System

📄 Original study
Radin, Dean, Stone, Jerome, Levine, Ellen, Eskandarnejad, Shahram, Schlitz, Marilyn, Kozak, Leila, Mandel, Dorothy, Hayssen, Gail 2008 Modern Era healing

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Plain English Summary

Can sending loving thoughts to someone actually change what's happening in their body — even from a distance? This study put that question to the test with cancer patients and their partners. Thirty-six couples participated, with the receiving partner sitting alone inside an electromagnetically shielded room about 20 meters away. During randomly timed 10-second windows, the sending partner directed compassionate, caring intention toward them. Researchers measured the receiver's skin conductance (basically how much your skin sweats, a sign of nervous system arousal). Three groups were compared: couples where the partner had completed three months of compassionate meditation training, a wait-list group of cancer couples who hadn't trained yet, and healthy control couples with no training. The headline result is striking — across all sessions, receivers showed a significant spike in skin conductance right when their partner was sending intention, with odds against chance of about 10,000 to 1. Even more impressive, the trained couples produced effect sizes nearly seven times larger than what previous studies in this field had found. There's a catch worth noting: the experimenter wasn't completely blind to which group was which, and groups weren't randomly assigned, so the between-group comparisons should be taken with a grain of salt. Still, the overall effect is remarkably robust and suggests that compassionate intention directed at loved ones might genuinely reach them in some measurable way.

Research Notes

Key DMILS study combining laboratory rigor with ecological validity through a clinical population (cancer patients and their partners). Effect sizes substantially exceeded meta-analytic DMILS estimates. Post hoc dose-response pattern (trained > wait > control) is suggestive but experimenter was not fully blind and groups were not randomly assigned. Speaks to controversy #5 (distant healing/prayer).

Seventy-two participants in 36 couples (38 usable sessions) took part in a DMILS experiment where a sender directed compassionate intention toward a receiver in an electromagnetically shielded chamber 20 meters away. Skin conductance was measured during randomly timed 10-second intention epochs. Three groups were compared: trained (12 cancer couples, partner given 3 months compassionate intention meditation training), wait-list (10 cancer couples before training), and control (14 healthy couples, no training). Overall receiver SCL at stimulus offset was significantly elevated (z = 3.9, p = .00009, two-tailed). Per-session effect sizes for the motivated groups (e = 0.74) were 6.7x larger than prior DMILS meta-analytic estimates, though the between-group difference was not significant.

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📋 Cite this paper
APA
Radin, Dean, Stone, Jerome, Levine, Ellen, Eskandarnejad, Shahram, Schlitz, Marilyn, Kozak, Leila, Mandel, Dorothy, Hayssen, Gail (2008). Compassionate Intention as a Therapeutic Intervention by Partners of Cancer Patients: Effects of Distant Intention on the Patients’ Autonomic Nervous System. Explore. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.explore.2008.04.002
BibTeX
@article{radin_2008_compassionate,
  title = {Compassionate Intention as a Therapeutic Intervention by Partners of Cancer Patients: Effects of Distant Intention on the Patients’ Autonomic Nervous System},
  author = {Radin, Dean and Stone, Jerome and Levine, Ellen and Eskandarnejad, Shahram and Schlitz, Marilyn and Kozak, Leila and Mandel, Dorothy and Hayssen, Gail},
  year = {2008},
  journal = {Explore},
  doi = {10.1016/j.explore.2008.04.002},
}