Thursday, June 28, 2007

Yoga in Health Care - What is Possible?

Here's two different new articles about Health care - both provide some perspective on our society's choices. I wonder how limited the choices appear to our society at large, since yoga is so poorly offered as a real choice.

In this first article, we see a yoga instructor teaching yoga to Cancer patients. I'm impressed by the apparent intention of the instructor to provide a genuine experience. Here's a quote:

Dr. Maria Jorgensen, an oncologist with Memorial, said healing yoga is not about performing a variety of physical poses.

"It works at more profound levels than the body," she said. "It helps the patients learn techniques to put their minds at rest and not be caught in the emotion of the moment. We have a power of mind over our bodies that we tend to ignore."

Read the whole article, it is a fine example of a yoga instructor and a medical facility working together to serve.

The second article is about a new intervention which won an award at a Wharton business plan competition. The intervention is by NP Solutions, and is about injecting a hydrogel treatment into a disc that is degenerating, focusing on a 20-something marketplace. What caught my attention here is that our society is quite ready to fund this sort of research, but finding the money to fund research into a yogic resolution of this sort of level of chronic pain - even though it will likely cost less, and have other beneficial side effects (unlike the medical intervention) - is much more difficult, given the dynamics of the revenue and profit model associated with yoga practice versus medical intervention.

Here's a link to the article on the Wharton competition. Look for the section on NP Solutions, which starts this way:

NP Solutions: One of the largest potential markets in the world of biotechnology is treating lower back pain, since many people begin to suffer some form of degenerative disc disease in their late 20s, and the vast majority of sufferers are not disabled severely enough for highly invasive and risky treatments, such as spinal fusion.
As a society we have choices, and I believe we have a contribution to make by bringing a yogic perspective to solving these problems of allocating resources for health care.



Saturday, June 16, 2007

The Urban Zen Initiative - Well-being Forum

So much great work is going on to bring the East and the West together. Here's one I just heard about today, brought into existence by Donna Karan.

Donna Karan Launches Urban Zen's First Initiative--The Well-being Forum

April 26, 2007

NEW YORK -- "Imagine if Eastern Philosophy harmonized with Western medical practice and if we treated the patient with the same passion with which we treat the disease ... When my husband Stephan, and best friend Lynn Kohlman were stricken with cancer, so much was missing from their care. They needed the powerful science from Western medicine, but they also needed the healing that can only be accessed from the heart, spirit and alternative approaches. Out of my frustration with the care they received at even the best medical facilities, a commitment was born. My mission is to create a working environment where the worlds of conventional and alternative medical practices unite to create new ways of healing, health and well being, focused on the total human and medical needs of the patient." Donna Karan

Read More....

And here is more from the Integrator Blog.

Raghurai

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Yoga in Advertising - Great Piece

This is an interview from 2002, from On the Media, an NPR show. There is a text version

Here's an illustration of how yoga is being portrayed:
'when all is said and done, potential customers will flip a magazine page to find Andrea Brook assuming a dramatic asana [sp?] -- poised in the presence of M&K speakers.'
And here is some of the rationale:

STEVEN POWERS: What are the qualities that a person like Andrea or any talented yogi has? Balance -Power - Focus - Clarity.
We've lived for the last few years with this sort of imagery permiating our adveristing...for better or for worse. I do agree with the reporter, and the teacher portrayed in the piece....more awareness of yoga is good. Period.

Raghurai

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Yoga Foundations

I'm very curious about this sort of foundation. A yoga center working to use the legal and tax system appropriately in order to be able to offer more service to their community.

The yoga center has decided to form a non-profit Show Me Yoga Education Foundation. According to SMYC Director Jan Harcourt, “forming the foundation will help us bring the health benefits of yoga to more teens as well as to seniors and others in our community, regardless of their ability to pay for classes.”
I'm on the hunt for more of these, I'm imagining that there are more?

Raghurai