PrepTest 37, Section 2, Question 19
Physician: Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for helping people quit smoking. In a clinical trial, those who practiced hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week and received individual counseling reduced their smoking and cravings for tobacco as much as did those who went to traditional self-help groups once a week and had individual counseling.
Physician: Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for helping people quit smoking. In a clinical trial, those who practiced hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week and received individual counseling reduced their smoking and cravings for tobacco as much as did those who went to traditional self-help groups once a week and had individual counseling.
Physician: Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for helping people quit smoking. In a clinical trial, those who practiced hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week and received individual counseling reduced their smoking and cravings for tobacco as much as did those who went to traditional self-help groups once a week and had individual counseling.
Physician: Hatha yoga is a powerful tool for helping people quit smoking. In a clinical trial, those who practiced hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week and received individual counseling reduced their smoking and cravings for tobacco as much as did those who went to traditional self-help groups once a week and had individual counseling.
Which one of the following is an assumption on which the physician's argument relies?
The individual counseling received by the smokers in the clinical trial who practiced hatha yoga did not help them quit smoking.
Most smokers are able to practice hatha yoga more than once a week.
Traditional self-help groups are powerful tools for helping people quit smoking.
People who practice hatha yoga for 75 minutes once a week are not damaging themselves physically.
Other forms of yoga are less effective than hatha yoga in helping people quit smoking.
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