Event Title

Microcurrent Neurofeedback for Addiction Treatment and Elimination

Presenter Information

Rick Warren

Loading...

Media is loading
 

Document Type

Oral Presentation

Date of Publication

4-17-2020

Abstract

The current status of research on Microcurrent Neurofeedback Therapy is examined. MCN Therapy modalities were examined using literary reviews of current research. Target groups of research included all age groups within categories of addiction, ADHD, learning disabilities, and PTSD. Findings support efficacy for treatment of all modalities regardless of age, past trauma, or other psychological factors. Detractors of MCN Therapy place low numbers of research as grounds to dismiss findings. PTSD and Addiction show the most promise as these areas have more psychological factors than do learning disabilities and ADHD. PTSD and Addiction showed greater results within the adult categories than in the youth as these participants needs were associated with verified trauma and psychological diagnosis. These findings show that this therapy is both effective and relative to the respondent's state of being. This paper finds further research is warranted but the therapy is sound and should not be overlooked or dismissed in the future.

Keywords

microcurrent therapy, addiction, PTSD

Persistent Identifier

http://hdl.handle.net/10950/2568

Share

COinS
 
Apr 17th, 12:00 AM Apr 17th, 12:00 AM

Microcurrent Neurofeedback for Addiction Treatment and Elimination

The current status of research on Microcurrent Neurofeedback Therapy is examined. MCN Therapy modalities were examined using literary reviews of current research. Target groups of research included all age groups within categories of addiction, ADHD, learning disabilities, and PTSD. Findings support efficacy for treatment of all modalities regardless of age, past trauma, or other psychological factors. Detractors of MCN Therapy place low numbers of research as grounds to dismiss findings. PTSD and Addiction show the most promise as these areas have more psychological factors than do learning disabilities and ADHD. PTSD and Addiction showed greater results within the adult categories than in the youth as these participants needs were associated with verified trauma and psychological diagnosis. These findings show that this therapy is both effective and relative to the respondent's state of being. This paper finds further research is warranted but the therapy is sound and should not be overlooked or dismissed in the future.