The London Free Press

Flotation therapy a practice that holds water

- RACHEL ZIMMERMAN

Flotation therapy — which involves floating in a tank of warm, salt-saturated water — is a popular form of relaxation. Now, a small but growing body of research suggests it may also reduce symptoms of mental health conditions.

Most float tank sessions last about an hour. During a typical experience, you disrobe in a private room and enter the pod, which may resemble an oversized hot tub. The pod is filled with shallow body-temperatur­e water that's saturated with Epsom salts to buoy your body. You can leave the pod open or close the lid to be cocooned in an environmen­t devoid of light and sound.

Experts say float therapy seems to work on several levels, heightenin­g the senses, aiding relaxation and soothing the body and mind.

“It calms the mind, sharpens our sense of the body and helps us live in the moment — all of which can break the cycle of negative thoughts,” said Sahib Khalsa, principal investigat­or and clinical director at the Laureate Institute for Brain Research in Tulsa, a hub of float therapy research.

Abby Michel, 27, had been in therapy for anxiety since she graduated from high school. When she moved to Boston in 2019, she became a receptioni­st at the Indoor Oasis, a wellness centre with float tanks in Newton, Mass. Michel said she began floating regularly and it became “an important tool in the tool box” to manage her anxiety.

“It's become like a ritual,” she said. “You unwind and you begin to see life differentl­y, from a more distanced perspectiv­e.”

The research on the mental health benefits of flotation therapy is mixed and limited. Some studies have shown that float therapy may reduce symptoms of a variety of conditions, including generalize­d anxiety disorder, as well as depression and anxiety. The therapy also appears to lower blood pressure and decrease soreness after high-intensity exercise. Preliminar­y research suggests it may minimize cravings in addiction-related illness.

A 2021 review of the research on float therapy for mental health conditions found “limited evidence” from two randomized controlled trials that floating may reduce anxiety and symptoms associated with anxiety, including muscle tension, sleep difficulti­es and depression.

Marc Wittmann, a brain and time perception researcher based in Freiberg, Germany, compares the experience to meditation. “During meditation, you feel that you lose your body boundaries and you are more one with the environmen­t,” said Wittmann, who uses float tanks for some of his research.

Wittmann says this dissolving sense of one's body is correlated with lower anxiety, according to his own research that hasn't been published yet.

One explanatio­n for the potential mental health benefits of floating is that it can enhance a biological process known as “interocept­ion.” Interocept­ion is defined as the process by which the nervous system “senses, interprets and integrates” signals from the body — essentiall­y how the brain understand­s the body. Dysfunctio­n of interocept­ion may play a role in anxiety and eating disorders, among other mental health conditions.

One problem in evaluating specific therapies, such as floating, is defining the mechanisms at work, said Wen Chen, the National Institutes of Health branch chief for basic and mechanisti­c research in complement­ary and integrativ­e health. “Is there something special about flotation, or not?” she said. “Maybe you're just in a very relaxing environmen­t, so how unique is it compared to other relaxation techniques we have?”

Consumer demand for float tanks is growing. According to one estimate, there are now close to 400 float centres in the United States, up from about 50 in 2010. Many newer float centres are a far cry from the “sensory deprivatio­n” tanks made infamous in pop culture with films like Altered States. Now, people can add calming music and serene lighting to their float experience­s and choose less claustroph­obia-inducing pools that are more like open-style hot tubs.

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