Reiki Side Effects
In the field of alternative medicine, reiki is a form of therapeutic healing intended to help bolster the patient's own healing abilities to cure all manner of maladies. Although there are typically no side effects involved with reiki, some practitioners warn patients that part of the healing process may involve a detoxifying cleanse that could bring about some unpleasant after-effects.
A reiki practitioner directing energy over a woman's head. (Image: DragonImages/iStock/Getty Images)Reiki
Reiki originated in Japan, and is based on the belief that practitioners can tap into a universal energy that can be channeled into the body of the patient. According to the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, a reiki healer will place his hands either slightly above or lightly upon the patient's body to direct this energy to the areas where healing is required. The energy is intended to increase the body's innate ability to heal itself.
Cleansing
On the Indigo Moon Reiki website, reiki master Andrew J. Gallagher claims a patient's body will work very hard to heal itself after reiki therapy. In fact, the body may try to accomplish this healing by cleansing its organs and tissues of toxins. If this happens, Gallagher cautions that the patient may experience such side effects as an upset stomach, indigestion, diarrhea or headaches, although these effects should only last for a day or two after treatment. On the other hand, the website of the India-based Academy for Reiki Training and Healing claims that reiki is a nonintrusive method of healing that has no side effects, other than the possibility that some patients may feel so calm and relaxed after treatment that they'll become sleepy.
Attunements
The Reiki Chain website, however, cautions that patients who undergo a reiki "attunement" will experiencing a cleansing period ranging from one to three weeks in duration. In an attunement, the healer will open the patient's chakras to provide her with the ability to receive energy all by herself, without the need of a reiki practitioner. During this time, the body will detoxify itself of toxins that have built up over time, as well as releasing feelings and thoughts that are no longer useful to the patient's health.
Criticism
The website of New York-based Vaughter Wellness points out that another possible side effect of reiki is that the patient may develop a psychological dependency on the reiki healer, despite the fact that there is no scientific evidence that reiki - which the site calls a "scam, perpetrated by hoaxters" - actually works. On Dr. Stephen Barrett's medical myth-busting website Quackwatch, his article "Reiki is Nonsense" makes reference to a comprehensive review of reiki research undertaken at the University of Exeter, published in 2008, that concluded there was insufficient evidence that reiki was "an effective treatment for any condition."