Why Most Wellness Therapies Don’t Work Long-Term

Reiki healing, energy therapy and holistic health in the UK: Why results often fade,
and what supports lasting change
The UK wellness industry has expanded rapidly in recent years. From massage and mindfulness to Reiki healing and other forms of energy therapy, more people are seeking support for stress, anxiety, and fatigue.
Yet a consistent pattern remains.
Many experience short-term relief, only for symptoms to return.
At Authentic Health, this pattern is approached from a different starting point.
With a foundation in pharmacy and clinical care, the practice is built on a clear understanding: stress is not only psychological. It is physiological, neurological, behavioural, and reflected in how the body stores, processes, and expresses energetic patterns over time. Treatments that address only one aspect of this system are unlikely to produce lasting change.
This raises a more useful question:
not whether these therapies work, but why they so often fail to hold.
Short-Term Relief vs Long Term Regulation
Most wellness therapies are effective at inducing relaxation. This is well established. A substantial body of research supports the effects of relaxation-based interventions. For example, a systematic review published in the Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine (2017) found that Reiki was associated with significant reductions in anxiety and pain compared to placebo conditions.
Similarly, a randomised controlled trial in Biological Research for Nursing (2015) reported increased parasympathetic nervous system activity following Reiki sessions, indicating a shift towards a more restorative physiological state. More broadly, relaxation-based therapies have been consistently linked to reduced perceived stress, lower heart rate and blood pressure and improved subjective wellbeing
However, these effects are often temporary. Without addressing how the nervous system adapts to stress over time, the body tends to return to its previous baseline, particularly in high demand environments. More broadly, UK health guidance recognises the importance of stress regulation in overall health. The NHS highlights that managing stress through relaxation and supportive interventions can have a measurable impact on both mental and physical wellbeing, particularly when used alongside conventional care.
Why the Effects Often Feel Temporary
A common limitation of standalone therapies is that they target only one aspect of the stress response.
In reality, stress operates across multiple systems:
• Physical : tension, fatigue, discomfort
• Neurological : sustained activation of the stress response
• Emotional : anxiety and overwhelm
• Cognitive : persistent mental load or reactivity
If only one of these layers is addressed, the others continue to reinforce the original pattern. Over time, the body returns to its previous state. This is why a single intervention, however effective in the moment, does not always
translate into long term change.
Why Single Modality Therapies Often Plateau
Wellness treatments are commonly delivered in isolation, a Reiki session, a massage, a mindfulness class, etc.
Each can be beneficial. But used independently, they tend to act on only one layer of the system at a time.
The result is predictable, short-term improvement or gradual regression
This is not a failure of the therapy itself, but a limitation of how it is applied.
A Whole-System Recalibration
At Authentic Health, this challenge is addressed through an integrated model described as whole system recalibration. This includes working with both observable physical responses and more subtle energetic patterns that influence how stress is held and released.
Rather than focusing on a single outcome, sessions are designed to work across multiple interconnected layers:
• Physical regulation : releasing stored tension and fatigue
• Nervous system regulation : reducing chronic stress activation
• Emotional processing : supporting stability and reducing overload
• Cognitive clarity : improving focus and reducing mental reactivity
These processes are not treated separately. Subtle physical work, heightened practitioner awareness (often described as intuitive insight) energetic techniques such as Reiki healing, and nervous system focused approaches including Spinal Energetics are applied as part of a single, responsive system. The aim is not simply to create temporary relief, but to support a more consistent shift in how the body responds to stress.
Why Integration Produces More Sustainable Results
Integrative healthcare models, particularly in oncology and chronic illness care, have demonstrated that combining complementary therapies can improve quality of life, emotional resilience, and patient reported outcomes. For example, research published in Supportive Care in Cancer highlights how integrative approaches can enhance wellbeing when used alongside conventional treatment, particularly in managing stress related symptoms.
This reflects a broader shift, especially among clinically trained practitioners, towards understanding stress as a multisystem process rather than a single condition. By working across these layers simultaneously, sessions can respond more precisely to how stress presents in the individual.
Rethinking Wellness
The issue is not that wellness therapies are ineffective. It is that they are often applied in isolation. Sustainable change rarely comes from a single intervention. It comes from integration, consistency, and a more complete understanding of how the body responds to stress.
Move beyond temporary relief. Build lasting resilience