Research conducted by Edward Blanchard of the Center for Stress and Anxiety Disorders, State University of New York at Albany, found significantly more anxiety disorders among  people seeking treatment for irritable bowel syndrome than among comparable age and sex samples of treatment seeking patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. So he has developed a programme to deal with these emotional and psychological factors as a way to treat the IBS.

His programe, the Albany Multicomponent Behavioral Therapy Program for IBS, employs techniques drawn from a cognitive behavioural therapy, so that you deal with any unhelpful thinking patterns and responses to situations.

In Britain, Professor Peter Whorwell, at South Manchester University Hospital, has also found this and has developed a psychological programme using hypnotherapy. He has found that the gut is very responsive to suggestions of relaxation and coolness, such that the gut rhythms change for the better. His team enjoy considerable success.

As a cognitive behavioural hypnotherapist, I draw from both these protocols. And they work well. Fast, effective and safe.