Individual therapies
Visualisation is a relaxation technique and is also called guided imagery. It uses the power of your imagination to help you relax or relieve symptoms. Other relaxation techniques include breathing exercises and progressive muscle relaxation.
Visualisation and relaxation techniques can help to relieve stress.
It might help you cope with some of the symptoms caused by cancer or cancer treatments.
It can lift your mood which might help you to feel more balanced.
A trained therapist can help you learn any of these techniques. You can practice them without a therapist, using a music file, CD or app. You can buy these online, at some book shops or from some cancer support groups or centres. Ask your nurse if they can recommend any or you could contact one of the complementary therapy organisations.
You create images in your mind that can help you to relax, feel less anxious, sleep better, and reduce pain. You use all of your senses – sight, touch, hearing, smell, and taste. For example, you may want to think of a place or activity that made you happy in the past.
While you are learning the technique, your therapist talks you through the sort of images that it may be helpful to picture. They may ask you to imagine a peaceful place where you’d like to be. Or they might teach you to imagine yourself feeling well and strong.
A therapist may be able to teach you the best visualisation techniques for the times when you feel most stressed. They can show you short visualisation exercises or deeper relaxation techniques.
If you have to stay in bed or can't leave your home, imagery or visualisation techniques may help. You may feel less closed in if you have been indoors for a long time.
This is when you focus on your breathing and take long, slow deep breaths to help you relax.
During progressive muscle relaxation you focus on tensing and relaxing the muscles in your body, one muscle group at a time. You do this until your whole body is relaxed.
These relaxation techniques are generally safe, especially under the guidance of a trained health professional.
It is best to use them alongside your conventional cancer treatment.
There are no reports of side effects.
Research has looked into visualisation to help control symptoms and treatment side effects in people with cancer. It is difficult to do this type of research and the results are sometimes not clear. We need more research to see how visualisation and other relaxation techniques can help people with cancer.
A study in 2016 looked at guided imagery and progressive muscle relaxation. They wanted to know if it could help reduce tiredness, pain, nausea, vomiting, anxiety and depression. The people who took part were having chemotherapy for breast and prostate cancer.
They found that symptoms improved in the people who did the relaxation techniques. The study did have limitations and more research is needed. But the researchers suggest that these relaxation techniques could be helpful for people having cancer treatment.
In 2010 the PERI study reported its results. It looked at visualisation and guided imagery for patients with bowel cancer. The study included 151 patients and found that relaxation and guided imagery did not significantly change people’s mood or quality of life.
An earlier review of 6 studies in 2005 suggested that guided imagery may be helpful in managing stress, anxiety, and depression for people with cancer. Further research in this area is needed.
Read about the PERI study on our clinical trials website
A small study in 2018 looked at visualisation, breathing techniques, meditation, and muscle relaxation. They developed a tool kit to see if these techniques could reduce anxiety before and after breast cancer surgery. The study was small (only 100 women) and had several challenges and limitations.
They concluded that some of the women benefited from the relaxation techniques. It helped with their emotional well being and resilience to cancer treatment. We need more studies and on a larger scale.
Many health care organisations or cancer support groups provide visualisation sessions led by a health professional for free.
Some organisations may make a small charge or ask for a donation.
Anyone can call themselves a visualisation therapist, so be careful about paying a therapist without checking what training they’ve had.
There are specific courses for training people to become experts in relaxation, visualisation and guided imagery techniques. Some nurses and doctors have training in this area. And psychotherapists, psychologists and psychiatrists all have training in the use of relaxation and visualisation techniques.
Learn more about finding a therapist
This page is due for review. We will update this as soon as possible.
Last reviewed: 03 May 2022
Next review due: 03 May 2025
Find detailed information and research into some of the many different complementary and alternative therapies used by people with cancer.
A complementary therapy means you can use it alongside your conventional medical treatment. It may help you to feel better and cope better with your cancer and treatment. An alternative therapy is generally used instead of conventional medical treatment.
Find organisations, support groups, books, websites and other resources about complementary and alternative therapies.
Treatments can include surgery, radiotherapy and drug treatments (such as chemotherapy, hormone therapy or targeted cancer drugs). Find out about treatments and how to cope with side effects.
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