Hypnosis is real — and it can help with IBS, poor sleep and anxiety, experts say

Hypnosis is safe and can work as both a standalone or a complementary treatment with other therapies.

a woman lies on a couch in a therapist's office
Although hypnosis can help with a number of medical conditions, it doesn't work for everything.
(Image credit: Fiordaliso via Getty Images)

We've all seen it, typically on television or on stage: A hypnotist selects a few members from the audience, and with what seems to be little more than a steely stare or a few choice words, they're suddenly "under the spell." Depending on what the hypnotist suggests, the participants laugh, dance and perform without inhibition.

Or perhaps you've experienced hypnosis another way — with a trip to a hypnotherapist for a series of sessions to help you stop smoking, lose weight, manage pain or deal with depression. This is no longer unusual; thousands of Americans have done the same thing. And many were helped.

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David Acunzo
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences, University of Virginia

David J. Acunzo, PhD, is Assistant Professor in the Division of Perceptual Studies at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. After a degree in telecommunications engineering from IMT Atlantique (France), David obtained his PhD in neuroinformatics from the University of Edinburgh (UK) and then occupied research positions at CIMeC – Center for Brain/Mind Sciences, University of Trento (Italy), and the Centre for Human Brain Health, University of Birmingham, UK. He has worked on a diverse array of cognitive neuroscience topics including vision, attention and semantic processing using various computational and functional neuroimaging techniques including EEG, MEG and fMRI.