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In
a clinical experiment with elderly African Americans (mean age 66)
dwelling in an inner-city community, Transcendental Meditation was
compared with the most widely used method of producing physiological
relaxation. Subjects who had moderately elevated blood pressure
levels were randomly assigned Transcendental Meditation, Progressive
Muscle Relaxation (PMR), or usual care. Over a 3-month interval,
systolic and diastolic blood pressure dropped by 10.6 and 5.9 mm Hg,
respectively, in the Transcendental Meditation group, and 4.0 and
2.1. mm Hg in the PMR group, with virtually no change in the usual
care group. A second random assignment study with the elderly
conducted at Harvard found similar blood pressure changes produced
by Transcendental Meditation over 3 months (11 mm Hg for systolic
blood pressure). |
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Reference
I: In search of an optimal behavioral treatment for
hypertension: A review and focus on Transcendental Meditation,
chapter in Personality, Elevated Blood Pressure, and Essential
Hypertension (Washington, D.C., Hemisphere Publishing, 1992).
Reference II: Transcendental Meditation, mindfulness, and
longevity: An experimental study with the elderly, Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology 57(6): 950-964, 1989.
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News
articles on the TM program and Hypertension |

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American Heart Association
press release,
"People
with high blood pressure may want to medicate and meditate,"
August 5, 1996. |

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Vegetarian Times,
"TM
Combats Heart Disease," February 1996. |

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Ashland Daily Tidings,
"Hypertensives
spell relief: T-M," by Jo Garcia, August 13, 1997. |

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Portland Press Herald,
"A
powerful case for TM," by Meredith Goad, November 27,
1995. |
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