
Bring Relief Room™ to Your Community Venue
The Relief Room™ adds a scalable, low-risk, evidence-informed layer of support that helps patients feel calmer, more comfortable, and more engaged in their care—without adding clinical workload.
The Relief Room™ is an easy way to strengthen patient experience and outcomes with services that pair naturally with medical treatment (not replace it).
Why Your Venue Needs Relief Room™
Download the Information Packet
Get a look at the our healthcare partnership programs and options to see how we can support your organization.
Applications
What can this look like for your organization?

On-Site Group Sessions
The Relief Room™ can be brought on-site to create moments of calm within your facility. Sessions can be held in large communal areas such as lobbies or cafeterias, allowing participants to easily step into supportive, guided relief without leaving the building.
This format is well-suited for staff wellness programs, long-term patients, and families supporting loved ones through repeated or extended hospitalizations.

Off-Site Group Sessions
Off-site group sessions provide a restorative experience in a neutral, non-clinical setting. The Relief Room™ partners with nearby venues to host guided sessions that allow participants to step away from the hospital or clinic environment and receive care in a space intentionally designed for relaxation and regulation.
This format is ideal for staff groups, outpatient programs, and patients seeking structured support without remaining inside a medical facility.

Individual Patient Support
The Relief Room™ offers one-on-one patient support designed to help individuals find safety and presence before appointments, procedures, or during periods of heightened stress. Support can be provided through scheduled virtual sessions or in-person, brief bedside offerings within the facility.
These interactions are designed to be non-disruptive, optional, and complementary to existing medical care.
Services Proven to Support Patient Outcomes

Sound-based Therapy
A substantial body of evidence shows music/sound interventions can reduce anxiety and pain in medical settings, including perioperative care. Large meta-analyses and systematic reviews report reductions in perioperative anxiety and pain, with some studies also noting improvements in physiologic markers like heart rate and blood pressure. SAGE Journals+3OUP Academic+3ScienceDirect+3
Cochrane evidence in oncology populations also suggests music interventions may improve anxiety, pain, fatigue, and related outcomes. Cochrane Library

Yoga & Movement
Yoga has evidence supporting improvements in chronic low back pain (pain and function) and is widely used as a non-pharmacologic approach within integrative care models. Systematic reviews/meta-analyses find yoga can be effective, though certainty varies by study quality. PubMed+2PMC+2
A large randomized trial (virtual therapeutic yoga) also found a structured yoga program for chronic low back pain to be feasible, safe, and effective—helpful when clinics want consistent delivery. JAMA Network

Horticultural Therapy
Horticultural therapy and structured nature-based interventions have growing evidence for improving mood and depressive symptoms, particularly in older adults and clinical/community settings. Multiple meta-analyses report reductions in depressive symptoms and improvements in well-being. PMC+2PMC+2
A recent synthesis of “social and therapeutic horticulture” literature also supports benefits for depression and anxiety symptoms (useful for whole-person recovery support). Frontiers

Breathwork
Research shows that breathwork interventions are associated with lower levels of self-reported stress, anxiety, and depressive symptoms compared with control conditions, supporting their use as a scalable stress-regulation practice that can enhance psychological resilience and calm. PMC
Breathwork techniques improve mood and reduce respiratory rate and negative emotion in randomized studies. PMC
Evidence also supports breathwork as a complementary, accessible tool for stress management and emotional regulation that can be integrated alongside clinical care. Global Wellness Institute
Our Clinical Partnership Approach

We believe holistic wellness is not an alternative to medical care—it is a powerful partner to it. Our work is designed to sit alongside Western medicine, complementing clinical treatment by addressing stress, regulation, and embodied well-being in ways that are research-informed, ethical, and responsibly delivered.
We reject “no pain, no gain” models of healing. In our experience—and supported by modern neuroscience and trauma research—lasting change does not come from force, overwhelm, or pushing the body beyond its capacity. Instead, healing happens through safety, choice, and nervous system support. Our offerings prioritize gentle, effective interventions that respect the body’s limits while still creating meaningful physiological and psychological shifts.
Client autonomy is central to our work. We believe individuals should remain informed participants in their own healing process, not passive recipients of protocols. Our role is to offer evidence-aligned practices, clear education, and supportive environments—never coercion, pressure, or exaggerated promises.
We hold ourselves to rigorous ethical standards. We work strictly within the scope of our training, do not lead participants into experiences we are not qualified to support, and avoid making claims that extend beyond current research. Our programs are designed as structured, responsible wellness protocols—intended to support regulation, resilience, and recovery—while honoring the expertise and authority of the medical professionals we collaborate with.
We take this work seriously because health is serious. Our goal is to provide integrative wellness services that medical institutions can trust, clinicians can confidently refer to, and participants can engage with safely—knowing they are supported by a grounded, professional, and science-respecting approach.

