Article Directory :: Health & Fitness Articles

Medical Miracles - Do they still happen today?

By Harriet Denz Penhey

Subscribe to Harriet Denz Penhey's RSS feed using any feed reader!

Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 03Aug2009
Word count: 729
Viewed: 301 time(s)
Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager!
Get Free Content For Your Site

Doctors are very wary about the idea of medical miracles but the idea of miraculous healing has been around for thousands of years. For those people who are facing terminal or severe chronic illness the desire for a miracle healing can be immense. Is this a legitimate hope or a false hope?

Whether miracles still happen today depends on your definition of the word miracle. If by miracle you mean that something is totally against the laws of nature then I would suggest that they never did happen.

However, if by miracle you mean a turn around in serious, or terminal illness when the doctors thought there was very little chance of recovery, then, of course they do still happen.

How can I be so sure? Most doctors who have been practicing for years have stories of people who have done much better than could have ever been expected given their diagnosis, prognosis (expected outcome) and treatment. Discussion on them is usually kept to the coffee room rather than the research unit.

It is also a matter of logic. If you have 100 people with a terminal condition then not all of them die at the same instant. They die one at a time. And for every 100 people then the last 10 will die later than the first 90. That is logical. And someone has to take longer to die than all of the others in that group of 100. Also within that group of the last survivors are some people who have such a good quality of life that some would describe them as miracle survivors.

The important question is whether there is a reason for some to take longer to die than others, or whether it is just chance? Fortunately research has answered some of these questions for us. While chance is probably always a component there are many things that those who survive much longer than others all have in common.

Ground breaking research was published in the academic journal Qualitative Health Research in 2008 which described the quality of such survival as personal resilience. What was really interesting is that all of the survivors had a very large number of personal qualities and ways of interpreting life that were in common to all of them regardless of whether the person was male or female, how old they were (23 - 90 years) or how much education they had during their lives (18 months to graduate degrees and further training).

The survivors decided early on in their illness to live each day with the best quality that they could make. They lived each day to the fullest and their quality of life was self defined. These were people who came to live their own lives, not controlled by others or by their disease process, but so that they could take charge for today.

Of course they were often constrained by their illness. If you are on a drip and confined to one room there are lots of things that you can't do. However within those constraints there were still lots of things the survivors chose as important for that time, such as being in charge of their own toileting or choosing to put make-up on for visitors. They did not allow their quality of life to be defined by their illness but by their own values and the way they chose to live on that day. The focus was on what was possible not on what they could not do.

Every person was different in the way they chose to define what was quality for them. However it was really interesting to find that by focusing on their own interpretation of quality of life that each person did come to a quality of life that anyone, whether medical carer or dispassionate observer would agree was quality. Each person ended up symptom free for at least an extensive period of time. Their disease remitted or apparently disappeared.

The fact that remission is physically possible means that there is a biological pathway for remission to occur in anyone and so hope is legitimate. Doctors worry about giving what they call false hope. However if there is just one case ever that has gone into remission means that there must be hope and when there is hope there is justification for exploring possibilities for improving the quality of life for those who are seriously and terminally ill.

Dr Harriet Denz-Penhey is an internationally recognized health researcher who has done groundbreaking research into patient self care in serious illness. Want to learn more about unexpected recovery from terminal illness? Claim Harriet's popular free e-course, available at http://www.beatthemedicalodds.com

Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager! Subscribe to Harriet Denz Penhey's RSS feed using any feed reader!

EasyPublish™ this article - publishers click here

More articles by Harriet Denz Penhey

Free Report!
Ten Essential Secrets Of Article Marketing ... Grab Your Free
Copy
Now:




We respect your privacy.


Need Content?
Regular Top Quality Content for your Blog, Ezine or Website ...
Delivered Direct,
For Free!

Click For Details



Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Business - General
Computers & Technology
Finance & Investment
Food & Drink
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Internet Marketing/Online Business
Legal
Pets & Animals
Politics & Government
Reference & Education
Religion & Faith
Self-Improvement/Motivation
Social
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Leisure
Writing & Speaking

More health articles:

  • Insights On Avoiding Dual Diagnosis Relapses (Joey Young)
    Dual diagnosis came into the medical world because of the co-occurrence of mental health problems and substance abuse disorders. Those who are abusing drugs or alcohol tend to suffer from depression, personality disorders, schizophrenia and anxiety. Often, it is not easy to rehabilitate dual diagnosis patients because of the possible occurrence of relapse.

  • What Is Dual Diagnosis? (Ericka Lopez)
    Dual diagnosis is made when an individual suffers from both mental health and substance abuse disorders. Those who have this diagnosis can be successfully treated in dual diagnosis treatment centers with programs that simultaneously address both disorders.

  • Steps Involved In A Successful Alcoholic Intervention Program (Rich Maputi)
    Medical doctors would say that a glass of wine a day is healthy, but drinking more than one bottle of beer a day is a another story. This could mean that you're an alcoholic. Other signs and symptoms of being an alcoholic are losing the ability to maintain a meaningful relationship with others, inability to perform tasks without the consumption of alcoholic beverages (dependence); another would be tolerance and withdrawal.

  • Seeking Intervention Assistance For Addiction (Rich Maputi)
    Life can be so tough to deal with at times. With so much problems and stress, we tend to lose track of things making life so hard and difficult. If you or anyone you know experience these problems then continue reading this article to know the best ways to seek intervention assistance with your problems.

  • Treat Your Drug Abuse Problem With These Treatment Centers (Joey Young)
    Dual diagnosis exists when a patient has mental and substance abuse problems. This happens because those who have psychiatric problems may turn to using drugs or alcohol to escape their mental issue and those who have substance abuse disorders are likely to have mental illnesses.

  • 4 Step Recovery Program For Addiction (Rich Maputi)
    Addiction in any form can make you feel so caged and powerless. People tell themselves that's it's about time to change our way of living. We might have the determination to change, but the question is; where to begin? Continue reading this article and learn the 4 step recovery from addiction that could help you get over your problem.

We Automatically Distribute Articles
To Thousands Of Publishers And Web Sites:

Submit Article
All content is viewed and used by you at your own risk and we do not warrant the accuracy or reliability of any of the information. The views expressed are those of the individual contributing authors and not necessarily those of this web site, or its owner, Takanomi Limited.
 
Copyright © 2012 Takanomi Ltd. Company no. 5629683. All rights reserved. | Privacy | Legal | Contact Information