Qigong: Evidence-Based Mind-Body Practice
What does qigong do for health and what does the evidence actually show?
Qigong — a practice of coordinated slow movement, breath, and intention — has a growing evidence base for reducing blood pressure, anxiety, and fatigue in clinical populations. Effect sizes are modest to moderate; the strongest evidence is for blood pressure, balance, and stress reduction. It shares most mechanisms with tai chi but is more accessible to people with limited mobility.
Qigong ("qi work") is often presented in language that obscures its practical mechanisms, but the underlying physiology is real and increasingly well studied. Slow, deliberate movement combined with coordinated breath training produces measurable effects on the autonomic nervous system, inflammatory markers, and physical function. Qigong’s main advantage over tai chi is its accessibility: it can be practiced seated, in a small space, and without learning complex sequences. Below are the evidence-graded practices.
Practices
- Standing meditation (Zhan Zhuang)
- Dantian breathing (lower abdominal focus)
- Eight Brocades (Baduanjin)
- Qigong shaking practice
- Qigong for fatigue and energy restoration
- Intention and visualization in qigong
- Qigong for chronic pain management
Standing meditation (Zhan Zhuang)
Stand still in a low posture for 5–20 minutes to build postural endurance and parasympathetic tone simultaneously.
Dantian breathing (lower abdominal focus)
Directing breath awareness to the lower belly activates the diaphragm fully and anchors attention in the body rather than the mind.
Eight Brocades (Baduanjin)
The most studied qigong sequence: eight structured movements combining gentle stretching, balance, and slow breathing.
Qigong shaking practice
Gentle full-body shaking releases chronic muscular tension held in postural muscles and engages the vibration-based stress-release mechanism.
Qigong for fatigue and energy restoration
Gentle qigong practiced consistently reduces chronic fatigue scores in clinical populations better than rest alone.
Intention and visualization in qigong
Mentally directing awareness to moving energy through a region while moving amplifies the proprioceptive signal and focuses attention effectively.
Qigong for chronic pain management
Regular gentle qigong reduces chronic pain severity through central sensitization modulation and improved body awareness.
Practice this with IX Coach
Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.
IX Coach: 7 days free, then $40/month (about $1.30/day).