GMA: Researchers Study Laughter's Effect On Illness

ByABC News via logo
April 19, 2001, 8:29 PM

L O S   A N G E L E S, April 20 -- UCLA psychiatrist Margaret Stuber spends her days showing kids funny videos. But don't laugh it's serious research.

Stuber, who works at the UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center, is heading up the Rx Laughter study. The researchers are trying to figure out whether pediatricians should be prescribing laughter to help heal sick children.

"What I'm actually hoping for is nothing less than revolutionizing the way we treat kids," Stuber said.

Ever since author Norman Cousins claimed to have laughed himself out of a terminal disease, scientists have theorized that laughing somehow bolsters the human immune system. UCLA researchers are putting that theory to the test. So far the results look promising.

"So our suspicion from the data we have is that laughter really helps fight off infection," Stuber told Good Morning America's Science Editor Michael Guillen. "So if that's true then having people laugh on an ongoing basis should be helpful for healing and fighting off illness."

Help From Hollywood

To gather up their arsenal of funny material, the researchers got help from Hollywood. ( What makes you laugh? Share your favorite joke on our live message board.) In fact the initial idea for the study came from Sherri Hilber, the former comedy director of the Roseanne show.

She called on the talents of comic legends including the Marx Brothers, Lucille Ball, and Abbott & Costello, all of whose living offspring are donating the films to the project.

"How do you license something like that?" said Chris Costello, daughter of comic actor Lou Costello. "You can't, it's like, do you put a price tag on health?"

Initial research focused on healthy children, and their responses to humorous videos. The doctors used non-invasive medical procedures to measure heart rate, and other biologic functions to see if laughter has a measurable physiological effect on healthy children and adolescents.

Next the research will shift to young patients with diseases such as cancer and AIDS that impact the immune system. The hope: humor can be incorporated into treatment procedures for young patients. For example, children and adolescents undergoing chemotherapy or other frightening procedures could watch funny videos to help alleviate stress and fear.