Dova Center - April 2020

LaughWith Me! A LIGHTHEARTED APPROACH TO DECREASING STRESS

We’ve all heard that laughter is the best medicine, and it turns out that human physiology supports this claim. When we laugh, our body releases a flood of feel-good chemicals and neurotransmitters. Our blood flow increases, and our production of cortisol, a hormone associated with stress, decreases. Oh, and laughing also burns calories! The feel-good, endorphin-inducing benefits of laughter are exactly what prompted Dr. Madan Kataria to develop laughter yoga in 1995. Laughter yoga incorporates breathing, stretching, clapping, and of course, laughing. Kataria developed the initial idea after coming across research into the benefits of laughter on overall health and well-being. He began to put the research into practice by telling jokes to his patients, and after seeing the

positive effects, he took his material to a local park. Parkgoers, who were initially skeptical, joined in on the practice, and the first laughter yoga club was born. The laughter meetup had everyone in high spirits — until the group ran out of jokes. Unsure of what to do next, Kataria found another medical book suggesting the group didn’t need jokes to laugh. Fake laughter is just as beneficial as the real thing because the body can’t tell the difference between the two. Collaborating with this wife, Madhuri, Kataria combined common yoga warmups and breathing techniques with facilitated laughter to create the form of laughter yoga that is practiced worldwide today. If you’re interested in trying laughter yoga for yourself, then you’re in luck. Laughter yoga clubs exist across the United States and the world. Videos on YouTube can teach the basics, but laughter yoga tends to be most beneficial in a group setting. Just think about the last time you found yourself in a fit of giggles with a group of friends or during a comedy show. Didn’t it feel great? Rather than wait for a silly situation to trigger laughter, use laughter yoga to promote laughter and alleviate stress on any day at any time.

How Acupuncture Can Supplement Western Cancer Care

A t Dova Center for Health and Healing, we often see patients who are going through cancer. And while we don’t treat cancer directly, the therapies used in traditional Chinese medicine — specifically, acupuncture — can offer relief from the symptoms often associated with a cancer diagnosis ( things like nausea, depression, neuropathy, chronic pain, loss of appetite, and inflammation ).

with symptoms like sleeplessness, anxiety, and depression, and it can stimulate appetite. When you have cancer, controlling all of those symptoms can help you tolerate the therapies Western medicine uses to treat your cancer. If you or somebody you love is currently undergoing cancer treatment, consider visiting Dova Center for Health and Healing. We offer treatments for dry mouth, fatigue, pain, night sweating, nausea, hot flashes, skin sensitivities, and pain that commonly comes along with cancer treatments like radiation and chemotherapy. And once your cancer is in remission, acupuncture can help bring back your energy and vitality, too. Acupuncture is a safe and proven tool for managing the side effects that come with cancer treatment. If you or somebody you love has been diagnosed with cancer, give us a call at 303.955.7226 today!

These days, Western medicine acknowledges the efficacy of acupuncture for managing the side effects of cancer treatment. In fact, many major hospitals, like Memorial Sloan Kettering and Cleveland Clinic, offer inpatient acupuncture to their patients who are undergoing cancer treatment. Recently, Medicare began paying for acupuncture treatments. It’s no surprise; acupuncture can help

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