Downward Dog Reduces Cancer's Fatigue In Biggest Study Of Yoga

Shana Kuhn-Siegel, a yoga instructor, leads David Goldberg, a 30-year-old leukemia patient, through a yoga routine in his hospital bed at Beth Israel hospital in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2010. Yoga doesnÕt cure cancer, but its stretching and breathing exercises did improve sleep, reduce dependence on sedatives and enable cancer patients to better resume the routine activities of everyday life, according to a 410-patient study being highlighted at the American Society of Clinical OncologyÕs annual meeting in Chicago next month. Photographer: JB Reed/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Shana Kuhn-Siegel, a yoga instructor, leads David Goldberg, a 30-year-old leukemia patient, through a yoga routine in his hospital bed at Beth Israel hospital in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2010. Yoga doesnÕt cure cancer, but its stretching and breathing exercises did improve sleep, reduce dependence on sedatives and enable cancer patients to better resume the routine activities of everyday life, according to a 410-patient study being highlighted at the American Society of Clinical OncologyÕs annual meeting in Chicago next month. Photographer: JB Reed/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Downward Dog Reduces Cancer's Fatigue In Biggest Study Of Yoga
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Credit:
Bloomberg / Contributor
Editorial #:
100023010
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Bloomberg
Date created:
19 May, 2010
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Source:
Bloomberg
Object name:
CANCER YOGA TREATMENT