The Express, London, England - 2/17/00
WHY DAFFYS BETTER
THAN THE DOCTOR
By Kevin Dowling,
THE EXPRESS, London, England
Doctors treating sick and terminally ill
children plan to find out if laughter really is the best medicine.
The study will aim to establish whether
controlled doses of comic characters such as Daffy Duck and Tweety Pie can help to
alleviate stress and fear, and promote faster healing. Carefully selected cartoons,
televisions hows snd classic comedy films will be shown to healthy child volunteers by
researchers.
The shows that make them laugh the most
will then be used to test immune responses in youngsters suffering from diseases such as
cancer and AIDS. We have a pretty good
idea about the impact that laughter and humour can have on a persons mental
well-being, said Dr. Lonnie Zeltzer, of the Jonsson Cancer Centre at the University
of California, In Los Angeles. But no one has really looked, with any depth,
at the possible biological links between health, having a good sense of humour and even
the act of laughter itself.Well study the impact that both humour and laughter have
on the immune system and pain transmission and control.
A colleague, Dr. Margaret Stuber, said,
We hope to help children who are hospitalised and getting treatment for serious
illnesses such as cancer and AIDS, where the immune system is vital and improving it could
be life-saving. The project is the
brainchild of Sherry Dunay Hilber, an entertainment industry executive who has worked for
the CBS and ABC television networks. The
cable TV network Comedy Central is helping to finance the research and sharing
its best jokes with the researchers.
I have often wondered, watching an
audience laugh, how they were affected physically and emotionally by laughter, said
Ms. Hilber. Does it relax their bodies,
improve their immune systems? If so, could
this help seriously ill people? I hope very
much this programme will lead to new ways of helping people live happier and healthier
lives.
The medical
researchers will monitor heart rate, blood pressure, palm sweats, stress-related hormones
and various immune system facotrs to determine if laughter really could be the best tonic
for patients.
It has already been suggested that if
you make people laugh, they dont get as anxious and they deal better with pain and
do better in the hospital, said Dr. Stuber. What we dont know, and what
we hope to find out, is whether laughter actually makes a physical difference in such
things as speed of healing.
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