Healthcare providers increasingly recognize laughter therapy as a practical, evidence-based tool for supporting children’s neurological and emotional development. According to Middlesex University research, humor-based interventions operate through three primary mechanisms: activating the parasympathetic nervous system to enhance brain plasticity, improving emotional resilience and stress response patterns, and demonstrating measurable promise for trauma therapy applications.
Dr. Jacqueline Harding’s work demonstrates that integrating playful interactions and humor into clinical settings accelerates healing for children facing developmental or emotional challenges. For pediatric practitioners, these findings suggest incorporating laughter-based protocols alongside traditional interventions can optimize treatment outcomes. Healthcare teams should consider how humor and positive emotional experiences can be systematically integrated into child therapy programs to build stronger neural pathways and foster long-term resilience.
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