8 June 2013

Dr. Robert McCarthy Interview - Part 2: Benefits | Education | Migraines



Dr. Robert McCarthy is the author of the new Integrative Medicine software suite published by the BFE. We recently had a chance to ask him a few questions about his approach to Integrative Medicine. This is part two of a three part series.

Click here to read Part 1.




How does an integrative medicine approach benefit your patients? I think you touched on it a little bit already in the case of Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder.
ADHD is only one area, but we work with the full range of medical disorders. For example, we work with people who have multiple sclerosis, hypertension, gastroesophageal reflux, ulcers, tinnitus, migraine headaches, tension headaches, panic attacks, cancer, and the list really goes on to eventually cover about 80% of medical disorders. Roughly 80% of all medical disorders are considered psychophysiological in origin.

So, the mind-body connection is all about how emotional well-being affects one’s health and vice versa?
Integrative medicine really means working with the patient as a whole system and various aspects or parts of that person. If you can conceive of a pie with a lot of slices each representing an aspect of an individual, and, yet all the slices collectively comprise the pie or bigger picture. Most medical or psychiatric disorders come about as a result of the multi-factorial influences of numerous slices from that pie. All these slices contribute in some meaningful way to the bigger picture, or who and what we are, and how we are affected by certain aspects of ourselves. What we try to do in our practice is to address as many of these “slices” as we can, without prioritizing their importance or potential significance. Genetic predisposition may be one slice, diet another slice, exercise yet another slice, personality another slice, mental status another slice, etc. Diet seems to represent an extremely importance “slice”, and potential contribution to our health and well-being, virtually ignored by the entire medical field, despite knowing that our chance of developing some form of cancer is directly proportionate to the volume of meat we consume.

How does biofeedback enhance your integrative medicine practice?
In order to work with patients as a whole system, one must be able to evaluate and treat various dimensions of neurological, somatic, and emotional issues. Otherwise, you are too limited in your usefulness to patients and the many ways they can potentially recover and heal. When patients come for their initial diagnostic interview, rarely do they not describe a matrix of neurological, psychiatric and physical complaints that need to be addressed. By understanding psychophysiology, we're able to provide a comprehensive integrative medicine treatment approach that enables people to achieve therapeutic goals not possible within a uni-dimensional therapeutic framework. In essence, we are teaching patients how to develop healthier, happier and more fulfilling, meaningful lives.

How do clients find out about your practice?
The majority of patient referrals are received from primary care physicians (Family physicians, internists, pediatricians, Obstetricians, Gynecologists), then neurologists. Many patients committed to a holistic health orientation also find us on the internet. So they might have been searching for a significant period of time, looking for some treatment other than drugs or surgery that was going to provide them relief. Many psychophysiological disorders are complicated by what is called secondary gain. In other words, sometimes we derive gratification or benefit from remaining symptomatic. It is quite common to work with patients and have their psychophysiological disorder go into remission, but, in doing so, realize all the major changes they need to make in their life. When patients are unwilling to make those major life changes, symptoms can rapidly return and keep the patient immobilized.

One woman I recently worked with had literally been all over the world seeking out specialized migraine headache clinics, without relief. When we started focusing on diaphragmatic breathing, she suddenly noticed her migraine and intra-cranial discomfort disappear. So, her diaphragmatic breathing, progressed to heart rate variability training and eventually hemoencephalography (HEG). Within two to three month, this patient’s migraines were gone.

Unfortunately, she remained married to an alcoholic man who continued to binge drink. Eventually, she came to the conclusion that a lot of her stress and headaches had to do with conflicted feelings about her spouse’s drinking, and unhappiness surrounding her marriage. She came from an extremely religious family that pressured her to remain married to this man. Within a short time, her migraine headaches returned to pre-treatment levels.

Hence, we see these scenarios in the lives of patients a great deal when working with psychophysiological disorders, where something else in their life is stressful and they refuse to address the conflict that would require major changes and disruption in lifestyle. Dr. Erik Peper emphasizes in his new book the commitment we as individuals must take to “Make Health Happen”. The reality is most patients want to get better but they sometimes don't want to invest the time and effort to do the necessary work to bring this about, even terminal cancer patients.

Do you think we rely too much on prescription drugs?
Poly-pharmacology represents a growing social problem. It's not unusual today for us to see patients on ten, twelve or fifteen medicines, prescribed by different practitioners. Some of the medicines may be redundant. Our universal therapeutic goal with all patients is to help them get down to the minimum amount of medications absolutely necessary. I think people really have to be more honest and truthful about the unknowns involved when we mix several medicines in our body. We only do research in the field of medicine by testing a new drug and its relative efficacy in comparison to a placebo. I know of no research whatsoever that helps us understand the intricacies of how people and their bodies may be potentially impacted when given prescriptive “cocktails” involving three, four, five, ten or twelve medicines. Therefore, it is important to streamline as much as we can by using integrative medicine treatment options which most people and practitioners have still not heard about.

Biofeedback, neurofeedback, cranial electrical stimulation, audiovisual entrainment and computerized cognitive training are almost as foreign today to most patients and physicians as they were years ago during development. Drug companies obviously have a vested interest in this information not getting out. So we constantly strive to expand the awareness of our patients and exert their right to choose from a comprehensive list of treatment options. Our position is that all health care providers should be educators, and not try and impose their personal belief system on others. We educate patients about all their options and then it's up to the individual patient within their belief system to use whatever available techniques or treatments they, ultimately, choose. It is quite interesting to note that in Suzanne Sommers’ recent book and review of cutting edge cancer treatment, many oncologists stated they would not undergo chemotherapy if diagnosed with cancer.

On the topic of educating clients about the various treatment options that exist, how do they react to this approach?
When we introduce patients to the field of integrative medicine and all their scientifically-based treatment options, their first question is usually, “Why did my physician never tell me about this stuff?” Or, in many cases, physicians make critical comments or totally dismiss these techniques. Here are two funny patient stories. Quite a few years ago, a Myrtle Beach internist returned after attending a medical conference at Harvard. He told our patient that if qEEGs and neurofeedback were any good, they would be doing it at Harvard and he would have certainly heard a lecture about it during his Harvard Conference. When we provided that physician information about Dr. Frank Duffy and his work with qEEG and neurofeedback at Harvard, we never heard from him again. Similarly, a patient came to us after relocating from Los Angeles, California. In the twelve years prior to relocating, he received various medications and treatments for an intractable depression at UCLA. When I suggested he complete a quantitative electroencephalogram, and had never heard of the technique before during his twelve years of treatment at UCLA, I was quite surprised. Out of curiosity, he contacted his old psychiatrist and inquired as to where on the UCLA campus quantitative electroencephalograms were given. The psychiatrist told him in the building right across the walkway from my office. We can all still be close, yet so far away.

Once we get past a patient’s initial skepticism, they usually become curious. In most patients, that curiosity gives rise to further interest and integrative medicine treatment involvement. Once they start benefiting, then these procedures develop a momentum of their own. I once had a migraine patient who we helped a great deal refer fifteen other patients plagued by the same problem.

So, we still have a lot of work to do to educate communities about the benefits using an integrative approach including biofeedback and neurofeedback.
I don't know if you are aware that in the United States there are a lot of primary care physicians restructuring their practices. Instead of requiring the traditional fee for service all of us are familiar with, these physicians now charge an annual fee of several thousand dollars. However, as a result, they are now able to spend forty-five minutes with you each and every time you come to them with a problem. This extended examination period permits in-depth discussion and a more comprehensive evaluation. Unfortunately, due to the annual fees involved, it isn't accessible to lower socio-economic segments in the population, but does represent the rebellious idea that superficially “windmilling”patients in and out of exam rooms after just fifteen minutes has its drawbacks and may not be the ideal way to practice medicine.

President Obama actually came out a few weeks ago and said that “brain mapping” would now be required and routinely used for certain medical disorders like asperger’s, autism, etc. under his new National healthcare system. Texas is the only State in this country that for years has had a law requiring insurance companies to reimburse neurofeedback services for certain medical conditions such as head injury, stroke, ADHD, etc. So, regardless of one’s political affiliation, President Obama is getting some sound scientific input from health care professionals on the need for specific changes.
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In a May 2013 post on the American Psychological Association website, Washington, DC writer Rebecca A. Clay talks about the importance on integrating physical and behavioral health.

Treating Mind and Body
“A Sixty-eight percent of adults with mental health conditions also have medical conditions, and 29 percent of adults with medical conditions have mental health conditions. "If that's not a reason to integrate mental and behavioral health care into primary care, I don't know what is," said Rebecca B. Chickey, MPH, director of the American Hospital Association's section for psychiatric and substance abuse services.”

_______________________________________________________

In Part 3 of this series, Dr. McCarthy will talk about some of the features of his new Integrative Medicine Software Suite and will present a couple case studies.

5 June 2013

Dr. Robert McCarthy Interview - Part 1: Intro to Integrative Medicine | Building a Referral Network | ADHD


Dr. Robert McCarthy is the author of the new Integrative Medicine software suite published by the BFE. We recently had a chance to ask him a few questions about his approach to Integrative Medicine. Here is part one of a 3 part series.



How did you become interested in the field of Integrative Medicine?
I became interested in the concept of Integrative Medicine many years ago while completing postgraduate studies at the New York Center for Psychoanalytic Training in Manhattan. It became rather obvious to me that many psychotherapy patients over the course of their treatment reported an improved global health and physical well-being. For example, numerous medical conditions either improved or went into remission, and they were less susceptible to viruses and colds than was originally the case. In the early to mid-70s, this was certainly not something openly talked about or published by professionals, although the roots of biofeedback in operant conditioning date back to the 1930s with Thorndike and his cat experiments.

One of the Faculty members I took a course with was a psychiatrist, Dr. Clara Torda. Dr. Torda was the Chief Psychiatrist at Jacobi Hospital in Queens, New York if I remember accurately. Rumor was that in ten years as a practicing psychiatrist, she only wrote one script for a psychiatric bipolar patient requiring mood stabilization. Other than that, she remained a devoted psychoanalyst. I later learned that Dr. Torda specialized in the treatment of epilepsy, and found that weekly participation in group counselling was as or more effective in controlling seizures in patients than the standard medicines used at the time.

Dr. Torda tried to publish her research results, as she was also a staunch and devoted scientist, over the next ten years, but was unable to do so because all the medical journals she approached said that the majority of their advertisements were paid for by drug companies who would get upset about these results and might withdraw their ads. So, after almost a decade of attempting to publish the positive impact of group counseling experiences on reducing epileptic seizures, she gave up. So that piqued my interest and got me going in this direction.

How long have you been practicing Integrative Medicine?

I've been a full-time practicing mental health clinician for the last forty years. However, it’s the last twenty-five years that I have specialized in biofeedback and what we now call integrative medicine.

Is your practice in Myrtle Beach, SC predominantly comprised of mental health professionals?
The field of integrative medicine represents a diverse community of healthcare professionals that cuts across just about every specialty you could think of. Even though the only professionals working in my office (McCarthy Counselling Associates, PA) are mental health providers trained in biofeedback and integrative medicine, we routinely interact on a daily basis with other health care professionals in the community, particularly physicians and inpatient residential settings.

Tell us about building a referral network...
Originally, we had to do a lot of canvassing and reaching out to other health care professionals, resources and treatment programs in the community. Doing this can get very frustrating and stressful at times - with minimal responsiveness. However, after 20 years of persistence and "stick-to-itiveness", while continuing to educate health providers in the community, we now receive a large number of referrals from physicians, including specialists. For example, the Neurology group in town actually refers clients to us for quantitative electroencephalograms (qEEG) now to help clarify differential neuropsychiatric diagnoses. We view this as a major accomplishment, along with our ongoing affiliation with three of the most well-respected primary care practices in the area.

In addition, when I originally moved to this area twenty years ago the County school system said they did not accept outside opinions from anyone. Here we are after working with the school system for the past two decades, receiving an abundance of referrals for Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder, learning disabled, asperger’s and autism spectrum disorders.

You bring up a topic that certainly receives a lot of media attention. What is your approach to diagnosis and treatment of ADHD?
The major problem today surrounding the controversial diagnosis of Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder is simply the way many clinicians arrive at a diagnostic conclusion when assessing children, adolescents and adults. Recently, a study reviewed by Dr. Rabinowitz, Chief Scientist at Duke University, in his monthly newsletter, pointed out the questionable reliability and validity of pencil-and-paper questionnaires, and called for the greater use of quantitative electroencephalograms (qEEGs) whenever attempting to diagnose this disorder.

If you take a child to any clinician, whether it is a pediatrician, psychiatrist, family physician, neurologist, psychologist, social worker, licensed professional counselor, marital and family therapist, or psychiatric nurse practitioner, and we only talk to you about your family member’s symptoms and behavior, even if supplemented by checklists, and reach a diagnostic conclusion as to whether the individual has or doesn’t have Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder, we'll be right about 60% of the time and wrong 40% of the time. From a research perspective, 50-50 represents coin flipping. Whether clinicians are willing to admit it or not, we're really not doing a whole lot better than coin-flipping with interviews and checklists. On the other hand, if we incorporate the results of quantitative electroencephalograms (qEEGs), the accuracy rates increase to well-above 90%, and are on a similar par with the results of MRIs and CT scans.

The other thing that hampers the medical community is not properly identifying co-existing or co-morbid psychiatric disorders. What traditional physicians often miss are learning disabilities, anxiety and mood disorders. In fact, several research studies have suggested it is actually more common to have Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder and a learning disability, rather than either condition alone. Prescriptive medications can quickly aggravate and produce negative side effects by unknowingly aggravating these comorbid disorders. Approximately 5% of bipolar continuum patients have Attention-Deficit\Hyperactivity Disorder. What's nice about the qEEG is not only does it represent a state-of-the-art technique for diagnosing ADHD, but it also gives us the opportunity to thoroughly assess brain functioning in other ways.

Another thing the qEEG can show is configurational patterning associated with properly medicating children. While the DSM-IV talks about three subtypes of the disorder, Dr. Amen (one of the three leading brain researchers in the world) feels he has identified seven neurological subtypes. Only three of the seven subtypes defined by Dr. Amen respond well to the unilateral use of psychostimulant medication. Of greater concern, psychostimulants can make the other four subtypes as defined by Dr. Amen, worse. Commonly, we see children with ADHD and an anxiety disorder unilaterally prescribed a psychostimulant that causes them to become even more nervous, tense, restless, fearful, and unable to sleep. It’s like throwing gas on a fire to put it out. Patients and parents alike assume it’s a problem with the medicine, not a partial diagnosis and the prescribing doctor. Had this same child initially been given a qEEG and prescribed a psychostimulant along with an SSRI, the SSRI could have controlled the anxiety while the stimulant activated the frontal lobes. The patient would have progressed and family members would be happy. It's this interaction with co-morbid disorders that requires the kind of objective scrutiny that only neurofeedback and qEEGs
provide.

Although you are a proponent of the use of neurofeedback for ADHD, you seem to feel that pharmaceuticals have their place.
Absolutely! Our practice is not in any way anti-medicine. We provide scientifically-based treatment alternatives, and in some cases non-medicine treatment alternatives that eliminate the need for medicine. Approximately 50% of patients who do neurofeedback may no longer need medicine; while the other 50% of patients will likely need a combination of medication and neurofeedback to do as well as they are capable of.

In 2012, the American Academy of Pediatrics upgraded neurofeedback to a Level 1 treatment for ADHD. Click here to view chart. 

The INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE SOFTWARE SUITE is now available in the BFE Online Shop.
"Dr.  Robert McCarthy's Integrated Behavioral Medicine suite provides an extensive methodology for developing a very detailed  psychological profile for patients. The results will allow the clinician-practitioner to know which peripheral and EEG  based  modalities are most relevant for biofeedback training and  monitoring.  Although psychophysiological profiles have been in existence  since the 1940s this one is the most extensive developed so far."
Joel F. Lubar Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus
University of Tennessee
Director Southeastern Neurofeedback Institute Inc.
BCIA Senior Fellow-EEG, Board Certified in Neurofeedback QEEG Diplomate



In Part 2 of this series, we will discuss the benefits of Integrative Medicine and the need to educate both patients and doctors about this approach. Dr. McCarthy will share a case on how he used biofeedback to a client with headaches.


 

 

15 May 2013

May is Mental Health Awareness Month in the US

I'm Blogging for Mental Health. According to the National Institutes of Mental Health, one in four Americans experiences a mental health disorder every year. Yet there is still a stigma about mental illness. I would like to extend thanks to the American Psychological Association for organizing this event and to everyone who has chosen to take part and share their voice. Click here to view posts.

In my role as Education Manager at the BFE, I have had the opportunity to learn about the work of many mental health professionals around the world who have incorporated biofeedback and neurofeedback into their practices. Our field has such great potential but remains virtually unknown to so many. 

So what is biofeedback?
The AAPB (Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback) website sums it up nicely:

“Biofeedback is a process that enables an individual to learn how to change physiological activity for the purposes of improving health and performance. Precise instruments measure physiological activity such as brainwaves, heart function, breathing, muscle activity, and skin temperature. These instruments rapidly and accurately "feed back" information to the user. The presentation of this information — often in conjunction with changes in thinking, emotions, and behavior — supports desired physiological changes. Over time, these changes can endure without continued use of an instrument.”


Approved May 18, 2008 by:
Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback (AAPB)
Biofeedback Certification International Alliance (BCIA)
International Society for Neurofeedback and Research (ISNR)

Quite simply, biofeedback is like a window into the self. A good example to illustrate this is stress. In today’s fast paced world we are all familiar with stress and the negative impact it can have on our health. Most people can identify when they are feeling stressed, but may not be aware that during stressful periods their heart rate speeds up, their respiration rate increases and their muscles may be tense. With knowledge of these physiological changes comes the power to regulate them.

Biofeedback has been widely used by a variety of health professionals in the treatment of disorders such as anxiety, depression, ADHD, trauma and PTSD to name a few. In fact, the American Academy of Pediatrics has just upgraded neurofeedback to a level 1 treatment for ADHD. View the chart here.


You can learn more about biofeedback by visiting the websites of the AAPB (Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback), the ISNR (International Society for Neurofeedback and Research) and the BCIA (Biofeedback Certification International Alliance). All three websites provide a wealth of information for professionals as well as anyone interested in learning more about this fascinating field. Also, check out this link for a crash course on biofeedback: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a53LA7aL2Og

A Bit About Us...
The BFE Learn From the Best program provides continuing education via conferences, seminars, workshops, internet courses, and software for professionals around the world. Content is developed independently by International Research & Education Project teams. Financial support comes from the Biofeedback Federation CIC, a non-profit Community Interest Corporation located in the UK. For more information, visit the BFE Online Shop. The next BFE Annual Conference is scheduled to take place February 11-15, 2014 in Venice, Italy.



Please feel free to contact me if you would like more information.
Carol Meyers
Education Manager
education@bfe.org

26 April 2013

Integrative Medicine Software Suite


Integrative medicine is a patient centered approach that focuses on treating the person, not just the disease. Dr. Robert McCarthy recognizes the importance of doing just that. He has shared his expertise in the field with the BFE as part of its Learn From the Best program. In March, we released the Integrative Medicine software suite for Infiniti users.

The field of Integrative Medicine has grown considerably over the last decade. According to WebMD, “Both doctors and patients alike are bonding with the philosophy of integrative medicine and its whole-person approach - designed to treat the person, not just the disease. When asked about this holistic approach, Dr. McCarthy replied, “The contemporary philosophy of integrative medicine involves working directly in cooperation with traditional physicians and medical approaches. Working with the human being as one complex, interactive, biological, emotional and social system can result in enhanced health and well-being.”

Integrative Medicine Software Suite
This limited edition suite supports techniques utilized and developed by Dr. McCarthy throughout his 30 years providing assessment, diagnosis, remediation, and treatment for individuals with emotional, physical, neurological, and developmental problems. The additional documents included in this suite come directly from Dr. McCarthy’s clinic and provide a com-prehensive resource for clinicians that desire to set up their own state-of-the-art integrative medicine practice. The suite includes:
  • Psychophysiological profile assessment protocol (22min duration, with 15 activities)
  • Paradoxical Temperature Increase (PTI) assessment protocol (25min duration)
  • Excel reports that allow for easy interpretation of psychophysiological assessment and PTI assessment data (one for each protocol) and implementation of a training program.
  • Training screens categorized according to modalities, that are quick to initiate and structured to move from simple tasks to more complex training goals. Also some more specialized training screens are included for atypical training, including Z-Scores.
  • Suite documents containing over 60 files of technical & clinical information have been provided directly from Dr. McCarthy’s practice and provide any clinician with a foundation for starting their own state-of-the-art-integrative-medicine practice. 
SAMPLE SCREENS

Early Reviews of the Suite
"Dr. Robert McCarthy's Integrated Behavioral Medicine suite provides an extensive methodology for developing a very detailed psychological profile for patients. The results will allow the clinician-practitioner to know which peripheral and EEG based modalities are most relevant for biofeedback training and monitoring. Although psychophysiological profiles have been in existence since the 1940s this one is the most extensive developed so far."   - Joel F. Lubar Ph.D.

"Hats off to Dr. McCarthy on the creation of the new suite. After a thorough review of the Integrative Medicine Suite I would have to say that this is the most comprehensive suite in the BFE catalog. This is by far the best suite made available from BFE. The suite covers from initial intake, patient progress reports, simple and easy to use screens to HIPPA compliance, assessment, consent forms and more. This suite covers more than just basic screens. the written manuals plus clear and concise training screens make it something that ANY clinician using the P2 should have in their tool box."   - Brian Milstead, Bio-Medical Instruments Inc.
 

I am very impressed with the comprehensiveness and ease of use of Dr. Robert McCarthy's Integrated Behavioral Medicine suite. It helps clinicians to develop psychological profiles and clinical tests appropriate for a given patient. The integration of psychophysiology and EEG is important and this is the only suite that I know that is complete and readily usable. The manual is concise and well written and is an asset for any clinician. It will facilitate assessment and treatment and this is what the field of biofeedback needs.  - Robert W. Thatcher, Ph.D.

Introduction to the Integrative Medicine Suite
For information on the contents and features of the suite click on the video.



Introduction to Integrative Medicine Suite from Biofeedback Federation CIC on Vimeo.

About Dr. Robert McCarthy
Dr. Robert McCarthy is a Licensed and Board Certified Professional Counselor and Supervisor with over thirty-eight years experience in the assessment, diagnosis, remediation, and treatment of individuals with emotional, physical, neurological, and learning disorders. His work experience includes employment in a variety of public and private settings: County and State mental health programs, correctional facilities, educational institutions, and private practice.

Dr. McCarthy is Board Certified in Integrative Medicine by the American Association of Integrative Medicine (AAIM), a Master Addiction Counselor by the National Board for Certified Counselors, and a Board Certified Fellow in EEG and General Biofeedback with the Biofeedback Certification International Alliance. Currently, Dr. McCarthy is Executive Clinical Director of McCarthy Counseling Associates, PA, and a Consulting Staff member of Grand Strand Regional Medical Center in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

Upcoming Class and Case Conferences
We have just scheduled an online class for anyone in learning how the use the suite. Participants will have an opportunity to pose any questions they have to Dr. McCarthy. Also offered are case conferences during which Dr. McCarthy will present specific cases using his Integrative Medicine approach.

Integrative Medicine Online Class
Instructors: Jon Bale and Dr. Robert McCarthy
Date: June 10, 17, 24, 31, 2013
Time: 10:00-11:30 AM Eastern Time (US & Canada)

Integrative Medicine Online Case Conferences
Host: Dr. Robert McCarthy
Date: May 20, 27, June 3, 2013
Time: 10:00 - 11:00 AM Eastern Time (US & Canada)

Integrative Medicine Software Suite


For more information, feel free to contact the BFE Integrative Medicine team at reddrmccarthy@gmail.com.

14 March 2013

Tennis Anyone? New Software Suite Now Available

Those of you who attended last week's webinar "Tennis - Optimizing Performance" had a chance to become acquainted with both Stephanie Nihon, (the presenter) and the BFE's own Jon Bale, who joined Stephanie online to moderate the event. During the webinar, Stephanie shared her expertise in incorporating biofeedback and neurofeedback into the training regime for tennis players. She recently worked with the BFE to create the Tennis Performance software suite that leads the user through assessment/training protocols with screens specific to the sport.


A Bit of Background
Dr. Vietta (Sue) Wilson is well known as one of the top sport psychologists in the field of performance enhancement with biofeedback and neurofeedback. There are several clinicians who have protégéd at her side, training athletes, determining protocol specifics for individual sports and fine tuning her method. Stephanie Nihon is one of those such individuals.

Stephanie Nihon, MSc, BCIA, BCN
As a former national athlete, Ms. Nihon has been involved in optimal performance training for almost 10 years. Working closely with Dr. Wilson, as well as at Michael & Lynda Thompson's ADD Center in Toronto, Canada, she has experience in all types of sports with specialties in tennis, swimming, hockey and most recently downhill skiing. Her experience includes training Olympians, NHL players, PGA golfers and National level athletes.

The Tennis Suite was designed by Stephanie Nihon and the Biofeedback Federation of Europe (BFE) as a training tool for the performance enhancement of tennis athletes. Specific protocols are given, as well as exercises and enhancement goals. Ms. Nihon and Jon Bale, the BFE's Research Manager, both agreed that there is sometimes a lack of creativity on the part of clinicians or trainers when working with athletes. In developing the Tennis Performance software, her/our goal was to give clinicians new ways of teaching and enforcing what an athlete needs to learn.

The BFE Tennis Performance Suite
The Tennis Performance suite consists of a short 1 Hz Bins EEG Assessment, with specialized excel report, and 6 training protocols that focus on specific modalities. All training goals, exercises and feedback is done with relevance to the game of tennis.

The 1 Hz Bins EEG Assessment provides an idea of the athlete's EEG amplitudes before training, as well as points out any anomalous readings. The results are graphed in an easy-to-read excel report that is generated automatically.

The training protocols are divided according to complementary modalities are statistics. Within each protocol are multiple training goals and exercises, that go from simple to more difficult. Exercises are interspersed among the training goals to facilitate faster learning with the biofeedback/neurofeedback. Instructions are included on each training screen so that the clinician/trainer and athlete understand what the goal is and how to interact with the feedback measurements.

The BFE Tennis Performance suite is available for direct download from the BFE Online Shop. Documentation includes a software manual, clinical manual and additional reference files for exercises provide by Ms. Nihon.

Hardware/Software Requirements
The Tennis Performance suite is available for use with the ProComp Infiniti or ProComp 2 encoder and is compatible with the BioGraph Infiniti software. Sensors used for collecting data and training optimal performance include BVP for heart rate, respiration, EEG-Z for brain waves, skin conductance, MyoScan-Pro for EMG (2 for ProComp Infiniti; 1 for ProComp 2) and temperature (for ProComp Infiniti only). Download tech sheet here.

Webinar Recording Available: Tennis - Optimizing Performance
If you missed the webinar you'll be pleased to know that for a limited time, we have made the recording available at the special price of $9.95. (Regular price $29.95) Click here to purchase.





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