Performing good deeds, like volunteering time to help others, can relieve physical pain, according to a group of studies published on Monday – just in time to inspire New Year's resolutions.
Researchers from Peking University in China examined the benefits of being more altruistic. Their findings were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
A connection between altruism and better health is not a new idea. Previous research has shown that volunteering can reduce stress and improve mental health, and a 2017 study suggested a link between diminished chronic pain and volunteering, according to CNN.
- MORE HEALTH
- The science behind hangovers and their myriad 'cures'
- Many Americans don't realize they're going blind
- Growing up with dogs may lower the risk of schizophrenia as an adult, study finds
The new studies more deeply explored why people may feel less pain when performing good deeds. Based on the researchers' findings, the answer could be that the areas of the brain that respond to pain are deactivated by altruistic acts.
The researchers asked 287 people to participate in various scenarios in which they performed good deeds under certain conditions. One group donated blood after an earthquake, while another helped revise a handbook for the children of migrant workers.
Those who volunteered to give blood felt less pain during the donation process compared to those participants who just underwent a routine blood draw. The group who volunteered to help with the handbook also felt a reduction in pain, this time in cold temperatures. Even cancer patients suffering from chronic pain experienced a reduction in pain when they volunteered their time to others in need.
In another study, participants were asked if they would donate money to orphans and then underwent MRI scans while receiving a painful shock to their hands. The MRI results showed that the brains of those who agreed to donate reacted less to the electric shock.
"We find consistent behavioral and neural evidence that in physically threatening situations acting altruistically can relieve painful feelings in human performers," lead author Yilu Wang wrote.
"Acting altruistically relieved not only acutely induced physical pain among healthy adults but also chronic pain among cancer patients."
The underlying reason for the pain reduction could be the sense of purpose a person feels when they perform these acts, researchers found. They recommend more research to be done on how altruism can be incorporated into behavioral therapies to treat pain.