Charlie Chaplin beat 1 1/2
hours of weather information in a study of the healing power
of humor - no kidding.
The Japanese study found that
skin welts shrank in allergy patients who watched Chaplin's
comedic classic "Modern Times," but not in patients
who watched a video on weather.
"These results suggest
that the induction of laughter may play some role in alleviating
allergic diseases," said Dr. Hajime Kimata of Unitika
Central Hospital in Kyoto Prefecture.
His findings appear in a research
letter published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical
Association.
Kimata was influenced by the
author Norman Cousins' 30-year-old research suggesting that
laughter and a positive attitude can help reduce pain. Cousins
suffered from a life-threatening joint disease and reported
that 10 minutes of laughter helped reduce his pain.
Kimata reported on results found
after 87 minutes. Twenty-six men and women with allergic skin
rashes and allergies to dust mites were given injections of
an allergy-producing substance. Their skin welts were measured
before and after the videos.
Kimata said exactly how humor
might have reduced the welts is not known. But Dr. Margaret
Stuber, a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences
at UCLA, said his premise "makes a lot of sense from
a scientific standpoint."