There has been a lot of research into it, for a long time (possibly still) it was widely believed to be an effective treatment.
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=hypnosis+warts
Thanks for posting this. Here's an abstract for one of these studies (my bolding):There has been a lot of research into it, for a long time (possibly still) it was widely believed to be an effective treatment.
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=hypnosis+warts
Would be interesting to know if there was research that debunked these studies or that scientists simply ignored it over the years because the quality was too low.It was suggested to 22 subjects that their warts would disappear if they imagined them tingling for a few minutes each day. Half the subjects received the suggestion after they had been exposed to a formal hypnotic induction procedure and the remaining half (controls) received the same suggestion after they were told simply that they were to be treated by a method called “focused contemplation.” Three of the 11 hypnotic subjects and none of the 11 “focused contemplation” subjects lost their warts during the experimental period. It is suggested that the relatively greater effectiveness of the hypnotic treatment may have been due to its believed-in efficacy; that is, subjects who lost their warts strongly believed that warts could be cured by hypnosis whereas the “focused contemplation” subjects did not believe that their treatment was especially effective in curing warts.
So this nonsense has been "tried" many times, enough to span dozens of pages of search results... and someone out there is thinking: "hey, let's try that!"There has been a lot of research into it, for a long time (possibly still) it was widely believed to be an effective treatment.
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=hypnosis+warts
It was suggested to 22 subjects that their warts would disappear if they imagined them tingling for a few minutes each day. Half the subjects received the suggestion after they had been exposed to a formal hypnotic induction procedure and the remaining half (controls) received the same suggestion after they were told simply that they were to be treated by a method called “focused contemplation.” Three of the 11 hypnotic subjects and none of the 11 “focused contemplation” subjects lost their warts during the experimental period. It is suggested that the relatively greater effectiveness of the hypnotic treatment may have been due to its believed-in efficacy; that is, subjects who lost their warts strongly believed that warts could be cured by hypnosis whereas the “focused contemplation” subjects did not believe that their treatment was especially effective in curing warts.
Funny you say that I had one on the side of the middle knuckle of my left index finger when I was a teenager. I didn’t fancy having that Strong salycylic acid I’d had When treated at school clinic for a persistent verruca. So I never mentioned it. I dealt with it by regularly biting off the hard skin and it would very slowly grow back. Lucky it didn’t seem to want to spread or I guess I could have ended up with one on my mouth but you don’t consider such things when you’re a teenager. I think it was very minimal for a long time but then bazuka was available so I zapped it’s last manifestation with thati had a large wart on the fore finger of my left hand for nine years i ended up digging its roots out with a sowing needle over a couple of weeks not as painful as you might think as the wart was not attached to any nerves.