Saturday, May 5, 2012

Weird Therapy, Hospital Clowns Use to Treat Infertility


the sex
Laughter is healthy and powerful way to relieve stress. Laughter is also touted to help improve the success of fertilization baby in fertility clinics. So it's a hospital in Montreal, Canada brings clowns to treat infertility in women.

2 the clown who has been accredited by the universities of Israel presents his paper at a conference on reproductive center McGill University Health Centre, Canada. The contents of his paper is about the relationship between humor and fertility rates.

The clown is known as a medical clown. His job is to entertain hospital patients. Medical clowns are mostly found in Israel and provided by various hospitals there. The reason, some scientists believe that laughter can help cure diseases and relieve stress.

"With a big red nose and a funny shape, clown Jerome Eisenberg Arous and Nimrod will make parents smile full of hope about the future and laugh with the aim of increasing the chances of conception," the McGill University Health Centre as reported by Canada.com, Saturday ( 05/05/2012).

Officials from McGill itself is unable to explain what exactly do these clowns to help women produce babies.

This clown was imported for the purpose of understanding to the officer at the McGill University Health Centre on the importance of medical clowns. This practice actually has a fairly strong theoretical basis.

In a study of 219 women undergoing fertility treatment at the clinic, 36% of women who entertained for 15 minutes by a medical clown successful pregnancy after implantation procedure.

Whereas in women who are not entertained, only 20% of people who are pregnant. The study, led by Dr Shevach Friedler of the Assaf Harofeh Medical Centre in Israel was published in the journal Fertility and Sterility.

Because it has not found a clear relationship between emotional stress and success of IVF procedures, researchers do not yet know whether the reduction in stress levels can increase a woman's fertility.

"We do not plan to provide the clowns in charge of official help of fertility treatments in the near future. But it never hurts to listen to the exposure of the benefits," said Dr. Hananel Holzer, medical director of the McGill University Health Centre.

McGill University Health Centre and other medical institutions in Montreal have long used a clown as part of medical therapy for children and adults, but not to treat infertility. These clowns clowns come from provider organizations in Montreal named Dr. Clown.

The clown, the Arous and Eisenberg, a graduate in theater arts and medical therapy graduate of the University of Haifa in Israel. Both will continue her studies in theater school in Paris. Haifa University is now making the Master program for medical clowns.

The clown is sponsored by the Consulate of Israel and the Quebec Department of International Relations. They provide a series of conferences and workshops in a hospital in Quebec City, Montreal, Chicoutimi and Halifax, Canada.

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