The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /

This research investigated the impact of stress management and relaxation techniques on psoriasis. It had a dual purpose to see if stress management and relaxation techniques, as an adjunct to traditional medical treatment, would improve the skin condition of psoriasis. In addition it attempted to p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baker, Christopher.
Other Authors: Department of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies in Education
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1356
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spelling ftbrockuniv:oai:dr.library.brocku.ca:10464/1356 2024-06-09T07:47:53+00:00 The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy / Baker, Christopher. Department of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies in Education 2009-05-21T13:54:27Z http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1356 eng eng Brock University http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1356 Relaxation Skin Psoriasis Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2009 ftbrockuniv 2024-05-16T06:33:42Z This research investigated the impact of stress management and relaxation techniques on psoriasis. It had a dual purpose to see if stress management and relaxation techniques, as an adjunct to traditional medical treatment, would improve the skin condition of psoriasis. In addition it attempted to provide psoriasis patients with a sense of control over their illness by educating them about the connection between mind and body through learning stress management and relaxation techniques. The former purpose was addressed quantitatively, while the latter was addressed qualitatively. Using an experimental design, the quantitative study tested the efficacy of stress management and relaxation techniques on 38 dermatological patients from St. John's, Newfoundland. The study which lasted ten weeks, suggested a weak relationship between psoriasis and stress. These relationships were not statistically significant. The qualitative data were gathered through unstructured interviews and descriptive/interpretative analysis was used to evaluate them. Patients in the experimental group believed in the mind body connection as it related to their illness and stress. The findings also showed that the patients believed that the stress reduction and relaxation techniques improved their quality of life, their level of psoriasis, and their ability to live with the condition. Based on the contradictory nature of the findings, further research is needed. It is posited that replication of this study would be vastly improved by increasing the sample size to increase the possibility of significant findings. As wel~ increasing the length of time for the experiment would control for the possibility of a lag effect. Finally, the study looked at linear relationships between stress and psoriasis. Further study should ascertain whether the relationship might be nonlinear Thesis Newfoundland Brock University Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Brock University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftbrockuniv
language English
topic Relaxation
Skin
Psoriasis
spellingShingle Relaxation
Skin
Psoriasis
Baker, Christopher.
The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
topic_facet Relaxation
Skin
Psoriasis
description This research investigated the impact of stress management and relaxation techniques on psoriasis. It had a dual purpose to see if stress management and relaxation techniques, as an adjunct to traditional medical treatment, would improve the skin condition of psoriasis. In addition it attempted to provide psoriasis patients with a sense of control over their illness by educating them about the connection between mind and body through learning stress management and relaxation techniques. The former purpose was addressed quantitatively, while the latter was addressed qualitatively. Using an experimental design, the quantitative study tested the efficacy of stress management and relaxation techniques on 38 dermatological patients from St. John's, Newfoundland. The study which lasted ten weeks, suggested a weak relationship between psoriasis and stress. These relationships were not statistically significant. The qualitative data were gathered through unstructured interviews and descriptive/interpretative analysis was used to evaluate them. Patients in the experimental group believed in the mind body connection as it related to their illness and stress. The findings also showed that the patients believed that the stress reduction and relaxation techniques improved their quality of life, their level of psoriasis, and their ability to live with the condition. Based on the contradictory nature of the findings, further research is needed. It is posited that replication of this study would be vastly improved by increasing the sample size to increase the possibility of significant findings. As wel~ increasing the length of time for the experiment would control for the possibility of a lag effect. Finally, the study looked at linear relationships between stress and psoriasis. Further study should ascertain whether the relationship might be nonlinear
author2 Department of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies in Education
format Thesis
author Baker, Christopher.
author_facet Baker, Christopher.
author_sort Baker, Christopher.
title The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
title_short The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
title_full The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
title_fullStr The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
title_full_unstemmed The use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
title_sort use of relaxation therapy as an adjunct to traditional psoriasis therapy /
publisher Brock University
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1356
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10464/1356
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