Intensive Hypnotherapy for Smoking Cessation: A Prospective Study.

Category Primary study
JournalThe International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
Year 2006
This study reports on a prospective pilot trial of intensive hypnotherapy for smoking cessation. The hypnotherapy involved multiple individual sessions (8 visits) over approximately 2 months, individualization of hypnotic suggestions, and a supportive therapeutic relationship. Twenty subjects were randomly assigned to either an intensive hypnotherapy condition or to a wait-list control condition. The target quitting date was 1 week after beginning treatment. Patients were evaluated for smoking cessation at the end of treatment and at Weeks 12 and 26. Self-reported abstinence was confirmed by a carbon-monoxide concentration in expired air of 8 ppm or less. The rates of point prevalence smoking cessation, as confirmed by carbon-monoxide measurements for the intensive hypnotherapy group, was 40% at the end of treatment; 60% at 12 weeks, and 40% at 26 weeks (p < .05). (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 8126fc3b2b9e95a374c485f3d33df792b11cf091
First added on: Jun 08, 2011