What is Energy Medicine?
Energy medicine is medicine based on physics instead of biochemistry, working with subtle forms of energy known as chi or prana that exist in and around the human body, treating with the understanding that all illness results from disturbances in the human biofield. It is defined as any energetic or informational interaction with a biological system to bring back homeostasis in the organism. Unlike conventional biomedicine, which focuses on biochemical processes, energy medicine addresses the body as a dynamic energy system where disruptions in flow, balance, or coherence manifest as physical, emotional, or mental symptoms.
Practitioners work with various energy frameworks: meridians—pathways through which vital energy flows, each associated with specific organs and functions; chakras, which are said to draw in energy from the universal energy field and distribute it via the nadis (meridians/primo-vessels) of the etheric body to the cells of the physical body; and the biofield or aura, an energetic field that surrounds and interpenetrates the physical body, believed to contain information about an individual’s physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual states.
Origins & Lineage
Since ancient times, traditional cultures have believed that a special energy vitalizes all life—known as chi, prana, pneuma, orgone, mana, ether, odyle, élan vital, bio-cosmic energy, and many other names. Early Ayurvedic references to a life force, or prana, go back to the eighth century B.C. In the West, as early as the sixth century B.C., Pythagoras conceived of a life energy, or pneuma, visible in a luminous body. The self-cultivation practice of qigong for balancing one’s qi was an early development in Chinese energy medical practice. In India, the corollary to qigong was yoga, which was designed to cultivate and move prana, a synonym for qi.
Energy medicine continued to predominate globally until only the last few centuries. In the sixteenth century, the Swiss alchemist and physician Paracelsus reported “a healing energy that radiates within and around man like a luminous sphere.” He believed this energy could cause and cure disease and could work from a distance.
The term “Energy Medicine” was coined by three researchers who gathered at Boulder, Colorado, USA in the late 1980s. The term has been in general use since the founding of the non-profit International Society for the Study of Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine in the 1980s. Energy medicine came under government guidelines in 1992 when the National Institutes of Health (NIH) established the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
In 1998, Donna Eden, a gifted healer with the clairvoyant-like ability to literally see the body’s energies, published Energy Medicine (written with her husband, psychologist David Feinstein), a book that helped define the hands-on practice of energy medicine approaches and that was a U.S. Book News Book of the Year (self-help category). Two years after the publication of Eden’s Energy Medicine, James Oschman’s Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis, established an empirical foundation for the field.
How It’s Practiced
“Putative energy medicine” includes biofield energy healing therapies that are claimed to direct or modulate “energies” to allow healing in the patient, including spiritual healing, psychic healing, therapeutic touch, healing touch, magnetic healing, qigong healing, reiki, crystal healing, distant healing, intercessory prayer, and similar modalities. Sessions usually involve the practitioner assessing how energy is flowing with energy testing. Once an assessment is done, the practitioner will use techniques to correct any imbalances.
Practitioners may use various methods: hands-on touch, hands-off techniques (working in the biofield without physical contact), or distance healing. Any rebalancing involves the elements of physical structure, nutrition, emotions in priority order, as well as the energy flow of chakras and meridians. By connecting all these components balance can be restored. Some modalities incorporate physical interventions—acupuncture needles, tuning forks, sound bowls, or crystals—to influence energetic pathways.
The NIH defines two distinct categories: veritable energy medicine, which uses mechanical vibration (sound) and electromagnetic radiation (light) in order to affect health and healing, and involves the use of specific, measurable wavelengths and frequencies to treat patients. Veritable approaches include PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic field) therapy, light therapy, and sound healing, while putative approaches work with subtle energies not yet measurable by conventional instruments.
Energy Medicine Today
Energy medicine is encountered in diverse settings: integrative health clinics, private healing practices, wellness retreats, online certification programs, and university courses. The Eden Energy Medicine Certification Program, established in 2008, has become one of the top energy healing schools in the world. Donna Eden’s training program has to date produced more than 1,500 Certified Eden Energy Medicine Practitioners who are providing thousands of individual healing sessions and teaching dozens of classes every month worldwide.
Practitioners range from self-taught healers to clinically trained therapists. Many physicians, nurses, acupuncturists, massage therapists, and psychologists incorporate energy medicine principles into their work. If you are already working with a doctor, Eden Energy Medicine can be an excellent complement to Western Medicine, working with the underlying energy of the body to support its natural impulse to heal—in any scenario.
Classes, workshops, and home-study courses teach laypeople simple daily energy routines. Sessions may be conducted in person or remotely. Increasing numbers of practitioners have been providing online sessions where they teach clients how to self-apply energy medicine methods for their specific needs.
Common Misconceptions
Energy medicine is not the same as the scientific concept of energy. This esoteric concept of “energy” used by proponents of energy medicine is unrelated to the scientific concept of energy. Critics point out that the “subtle energy” invoked in practices like reiki or therapeutic touch has not been empirically verified by reproducible scientific measurement.
It is not a replacement for emergency or acute medical care. Energy medicine practitioners do not set fractures, perform surgery, or treat life-threatening infections. Responsible practitioners work alongside conventional medicine, not as a substitute.
Not all energy medicine is hands-off or mystical. Many of the human body electrical systems and electromagnetic fields are well known, and veritable forms of energy medicine are being used in well-established models for patients in today’s medicine. EKG, EEG, TENS units, and laser therapy are verifiable applications of energy principles in mainstream healthcare.
Seeing or sensing energy is not required. Donna Eden has figured out how to teach those who don’t have her gift of seeing energy to nonetheless work with the body’s energies very effectively. Most students learn through kinesthetic feedback, testing protocols, and observable changes in symptoms.
How to Begin
Start with Donna Eden and David Feinstein’s Energy Medicine: Balancing Your Body’s Energies for Optimal Health, Joy, and Vitality (1998), a practical manual with illustrations and daily routines. The award-winning book, Energy Medicine, was first published in 1998, has now sold more than 300,000 copies, and is available in 20 languages.
For a scientific grounding, read James Oschman’s Energy Medicine: The Scientific Basis (2000, revised 2015), which bridges biophysics, fascia research, and therapeutic applications.
Explore introductory classes in reiki (Japanese hands-on energy healing with levels of attunement), qigong (Chinese movement and breath practice for cultivating qi), or therapeutic touch (a nursing-derived biofield therapy). Many community centers, yoga studios, and integrative health clinics offer beginner workshops.
If working with a practitioner, seek certified professionals through directories like the Eden Energy Medicine Certified Practitioner network, the International Society for the Study of Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine (ISSSEEM), or local integrative medicine centers. Ask about their training lineage, modalities used, and how they assess and track progress.