http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/article/2036-2523.html
The practitioners of TT use the typical excuses we've heard from other panderers of the paranormal:
http://www.camline.org/therapiesPractitioners/therapeutic_touch/description.html
These people have no business treating patients.
This is one dangerous problem with "therapeutic touch". While it may be true that such attention to a patient may result in psychological benefits (in other words, a placebo effect), the practice is founded in unproven pseudoscientific religious beliefs. In short, it is basically 19th-century spiritualism. Because of this, TT is a direct contradiction to the proven science-based medical practices it is supposed to complement.Energy healing
Biofield, or energy healing, is described by its proponents as "one of the oldest forms of healing known to humankind."14 Theories related to this practice involve transfer of energy from healer to patient in unknown ways, either from a supernatural entity or by manipulating the body's own "energy fields." Over 25 terms are used in various cultures to describe this life force. Biofield practitioners incorporate a holistic focus into therapy, and promote their methods as useful for stress and general improvement of health; relief of pain, edema, and acceleration of wound and fracture healing; improvement in digestion, appetite, and various emotional states; and treatment of conditions such as eating disorders, irritable bowel syndrome, and pre-menstrual syndrome.
Some unique conditions are "diagnosed" by biofield practitioners, such as "accumulated tension" and "congested energy" that, when released, supposedly lead to improved health. A common form of this therapy is used by nurses, and is called "therapeutic touch." It involves moving the hands over (but not in direct contact with) the patient's body either to create a general state of well-being by enhancing "energy flow" in the subject, or to release "accumulated tension" and induce balance and harmony. At least one school of nursing has demanded that its faculty cease teaching these modalities as part of their curriculum (personal communication, John Renner, MD).
Therapies that combine manipulation and biofield therapy include "network chiropractic spinal analysis," which combines soft-tissue chiropractic and applications of the biofield, followed by conventional chiropractic treatment; "craniosacral therapy," an offshoot of osteopathic medicine involving manipulation of cranial and/or sacral bones to relieve "restrictions" in motion of these bones that are thought to help persons with seizures, immune disorders, learning disabilities, and assorted other conditions; and "polarity therapy," in which touch, energy field manipulation, and other modalities correct distortions in one's "energy anatomy."15
The practitioners of TT use the typical excuses we've heard from other panderers of the paranormal:
http://www.camline.org/therapiesPractitioners/therapeutic_touch/description.html
Speculation. Excuses. Untestable hypotheses. Uniquely special easier conditions. Lack of definitive studies based on accepted standards of evidence. The same routine, over and over again.Some of the difficulty experienced in obtaining evidence of effect may relate to the fundamental philosophy of TT, of being partly a healing art as well as a science (34), with the implication that it's outcome is unpredictable (35). Proponents have suggested that there needs to be a different approach to assessing effect in a healing discipline such as TT (e.g. 7). However, TT needs more methodologically robust clinical trials showing effect on order to meet current standards for evidence-based practice.
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Some practitioners have speculated that it may be possible to "overload" a patient's energy field by too much treatment, potentially causing hyperactivity, irritability, increased pain or anxiety, and Kreiger has said that no session should be longer than 25 minutes (6, 36).
These people have no business treating patients.