Alternative and Complementary Therapies for Online Therapy: An Evidence Review

What alternative and complementary therapies help with Online Therapy — the evidence, risks, and how to use them wisely.

Many people seek complementary and alternative approaches to online therapy. Understanding the evidence base helps make informed choices.

Complementary Approaches with Evidence for Online Therapy

Acupuncture: Several studies show modest effects on online therapy symptoms, particularly for anxiety and pain-related presentations.

Yoga: One of the best-evidenced complementary approaches — multiple mechanisms relevant to online therapy.

Massage therapy: Reduces cortisol and increases serotonin — documented effects on online therapy symptom severity.

Supplements: Omega-3s, magnesium, and vitamin D have meaningful evidence for some online therapy presentations.

Complementary Approaches with Limited Evidence for Online Therapy

Crystal healing, homeopathy, and many energy medicine approaches lack scientific evidence for online therapy. Risk of harm is low, but opportunity cost of forgoing evidence-based treatment is real.

Using Complementary Approaches Safely for Online Therapy

Complementary approaches work best as additions to, not replacements for, evidence-based online therapy treatment. Always inform your healthcare providers of everything you're using.

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