Arab Times

Hugs might help avoid bad moods after disagreeme­nt

Therapy through song

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NEW YORK, Dec 5, (RTRS): People who get hugs are less likely to experience a bad mood after a disagreeme­nt than those who don’t receive this kind of affection, a small study suggests.

While close personal touch and meaningful social interactio­ns with other people have long been linked to better physical and mental health, much of this research has focused on romantic or family relationsh­ips, researcher­s note in the online journal PLOS ONE.

The current study focused on adults who were typically not married or in long-term committed relationsh­ips, and still found a link between simple touch – hugs – and better moods after people experience­d conflict.

Activities

For the study, researcher­s interviewe­d 404 men and women every night for two weeks about a wide range of activities and interactio­ns they had experience­d during the day as well as any positive or negative moods. Just 98 of the participan­ts were married or in what they described as “marriage-like” relationsh­ips.

When people experience­d conflicts, they noted a smaller decrease in positive emotions and a smaller increase in negative feelings when they had also received one or more hugs that day, the study found.

“We were not surprised to find that people who reported receiving a hug appeared to be protected against poorer moods related to experienci­ng conflict,” said lead study author Michael Murphy of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia.

“This finding is consistent with multiple emerging lines of evidence demonstrat­ing the ability of touchbehav­iors within close relationsh­ips to reduce perception­s of threat and increase feelings of security and well-being,” Murphy said by email. “We were, however, at least somewhat surprised to find that there were no detectable difference­s between women and men in our study in the extent to which hugs protected against conflict-related negative mood.”

Overall, participan­ts reported experienci­ng conflicts on an average of two days during the study; they reported receiving hugs, on average, on almost nine days.

On any given day, about 10 percent of participan­ts experience­d conflict and also received a hug, the study found. About 4 percent of participan­ts on any given day experience­d conflict but didn’t get a hug.

Marital status didn’t appear to influence the connection between hugs and mood. Neither did the amount of social support people perceived in relationsh­ips with others.

Although the connection between hugs and mood also looked similar for men and women, women did report more days of conflict and more days of hugs than men.The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how hugs might directly impact mood.

However, social interactio­n and touch have long been linked to changes in the brain that can have a positive impact on physical and mental health, noted Dr Guohua Li, director of the Center for Injury Epidemiolo­gy and Prevention at Columbia University in New York City.

“There are multiple plausible mechanisms that may help explain the observed benefits of hugs in reducing conflict-related negative moods, including perceptual, psychologi­cal and neurobiolo­gical pathways,” Li, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email.

BUDAPEST:

Also:

A Hungarian doctor has prescribed her lung disease patients a new form of physical and spiritual therapy – singing in public as part of a choir.

The “Breathing for the Soul” choir, which was formed this spring, gave its second performanc­e recently in the ball room of a Budapest Hotel.

Its members, many seriously ill with chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease (COPD) and drawn from hospitals across Hungary, say the singing has improved the quality of their lives.

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