Yoga used as therapy for cancer
1/24/2005 Carlisle, PA Leah Farr www.cumberlink.com Marty Frost hit a low point in his life last year. In July, he was diagnosed with mouth cancer. Then in October doctors discovered he also had throat cancer. Frost began a long — and sometimes extremely painful — treatment plan that included surgery and 31 radiation treatments. However, the pain was eased with his discovery of reiki, a therapy that he says gives him rest and renewed hope. Frost and other cancer patients are finding that yoga, massage therapy and reiki, a gentle touch long practiced in Eastern cultures to promote relaxation and energy, can help improve their quality of life. They can receive these complementary therapies at the Carlisle YWCA through a nine-month pilot program funded by a grant from the Carlisle Area Health and Wellness Foundation. Designed for people in all stages of the disease - from those who are newly diagnosed to anyone 18 months post treatment - "this program can be like an oasis for people in the middle of treatment," reiki practitioner Gigi Jantos says. It also "empowers the individual to participate fully in their recovery" as well as "improves their sense of physical and emotional well-being." The treatments are known as complementary therapies because they are not a substitute for proven medical treatment. "The main goal of the program is to improve the life quality," Jantos says. The medical benefits include reducing anxiety, stress, pain, nausea and fatigue. Other options The American Cancer Society estimates that more [...]