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Hypnotherapy for Health Anxiety in London: When Your Body Becomes the Threat

Most people who come to me with health anxiety have already spent considerable time inside the medical system. They have had blood tests, ECGs, ultrasounds, sometimes referrals to specialists. The results have come back normal, or broadly normal, and they have been told, perhaps more than once, that there is nothing clinically wrong.

That reassurance does not land. Or rather, it lands briefly, and then the monitoring begins again.

This is the particular torment of health anxiety: the thing that should provide relief, a clear scan, a normal result, a doctor’s confident assurance, produces relief that lasts hours or days at most before the vigilance reinstates itself and the search resumes. The person is not being difficult or irrational. Their nervous system is simply not listening to the evidence, because the nervous system that generates health anxiety is not operating on evidence. It is operating on a deeply encoded threat programme that no amount of external reassurance can reach.

This article is for anyone in London who recognises that pattern: the bodily checking, the research spirals, the temporary relief that never quite holds. It is intended to explain what health anxiety actually is, why conventional approaches often fall short, and how hypnotherapy addresses it at the level where it is actually generated.

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What Health Anxiety Actually Is

Health anxiety, sometimes referred to in clinical literature as illness anxiety disorder or, in its more somatic form, somatic symptom disorder, is a condition characterised by persistent, disproportionate preoccupation with having or developing a serious illness. It is not the same as ordinary concern about health. It is a sustained state of internal vigilance in which the body has become the primary site of threat monitoring.

The person with health anxiety is not simply worrying about their health the way most people occasionally do. They are experiencing a near-constant background process of body scanning: checking sensations, interpreting ambiguous physical signals, and generating worst-case explanations for symptoms that, in most people, would pass unnoticed or be attributed to tiredness, minor illness, or the ordinary variation of physical experience.

Common presentations include persistent fear of cardiac conditions, cancer, neurological disease, or autoimmune conditions. Some people have a specific feared illness that shifts over time; others have a more generalised vigilance that attaches successively to different bodily systems. What is consistent is the monitoring, the interpretation, and the reassurance-seeking, whether from doctors, from online medical databases, or from partners and family members recruited into the role of providing temporary comfort.

Health anxiety is considerably more common than is generally appreciated. Research suggests it affects somewhere between four and six percent of the general population, with higher rates among people who have had significant illness experiences themselves, who have been exposed to serious illness in family members, or who have grown up in environments where physical symptoms were treated as cause for significant alarm.

It is also worth noting that health anxiety and genuine physical illness are not mutually exclusive. A meaningful proportion of people with health anxiety also have real physical conditions, including conditions such as IBS and functional gut disorders, where the relationship between anxiety and symptoms is bidirectional and clinically complex. I will return to this connection below.


The Mechanism: Why Your Body Has Become a Source of Threat

To understand health anxiety clinically, it is necessary to understand what the subconscious mind is actually doing when it generates and maintains the pattern.

The subconscious mind is, among other things, a threat-monitoring system. It processes the vast majority of incoming information from both the environment and the body below the level of conscious awareness, evaluating it continuously for signals of danger. When it identifies a pattern that matches a stored threat, it activates the alarm response: the sympathetic nervous system engages, attention is directed toward the source of the signal, and the conscious mind is informed, in the experiential form of anxiety or dread, that something requires urgent attention.

In health anxiety, the subconscious has come to treat the body’s own sensations as potential threat signals. Normal physiological events, a heart that beats slightly faster after climbing stairs, a transient headache, a digestive gurgle, a muscle twitch, are processed through a threat-detection lens and flagged as potentially significant. The subconscious is not being perverse. It is doing exactly what it was trained to do, either by a specific experience or by a more gradual process of conditioning, but the calibration has shifted. The threshold for alarm has been set too low, and the body itself has become the source of the signals that trigger it.

This creates a self-sustaining cycle that is familiar to anyone who has experienced health anxiety and frustrating to anyone who cares for someone who does. Anxiety itself generates physical symptoms. The racing heart, the muscle tension, the digestive disruption, the light-headedness, the chest tightness that accompanies sustained anxiety are real physical experiences. When those experiences are interpreted through the health anxiety lens, they are read as evidence of the feared illness, which generates more anxiety, which generates more physical symptoms, which provide more apparent evidence, and the cycle continues.

The person is not imagining the symptoms. The symptoms are real. They are generated, in significant part, by the anxiety itself. But because the monitoring and interpretation system is operating subconsciously, the person cannot simply think their way out. The conscious mind is arriving after the fact, already in the grip of a physical experience it did not initiate.


Why Reassurance Does Not Work

The conventional response to health anxiety, at both a medical and informal level, is reassurance. The test is negative. The doctor has examined you and found nothing. The symptom you noticed was explained.

Reassurance produces temporary relief because it briefly satisfies the subconscious mind’s demand for certainty. The threat signal has been responded to. The danger has been, for this moment, officially ruled out.

But the relief is time-limited, and its limits are intrinsic to the mechanism. The subconscious is not seeking a final verdict. It is operating a continuous monitoring programme. Once the relief of one reassurance fades, the monitoring resumes, and new signals, or returning attention to old ones, generate the next episode of alarm. Some people find that reassurance-seeking becomes its own compulsion: each consultation or search provides temporary relief that is progressively shorter in duration, requiring more frequent repetition to maintain the same effect.

This is why I am often cautious about the reassurance-seeking dynamic in the clinical work, not because reassurance is harmful, but because providing it in the wrong context can inadvertently reinforce the cycle. The subconscious learns that alarm generates investigation, which generates comfort. It is a loop that can be maintained indefinitely without ever addressing what is actually generating the alarm.

What is needed is not a better or more authoritative reassurance. What is needed is a recalibration of the monitoring system itself.


Health Anxiety and the Gut: A Clinically Important Connection

Before addressing how hypnotherapy works, I want to note a specific clinical intersection that is relevant to a number of people who find their way to my practice.

Health anxiety and functional gut symptoms, particularly IBS and related conditions, frequently coexist and reinforce each other in ways that are clinically significant. The mechanism is not difficult to understand.

The gut is richly innervated and continuously generating signals that travel to the brain. For most people, most of the time, these signals are processed subconsciously and do not reach the level of conscious awareness. For someone with health anxiety, particularly someone who has been monitoring their body closely, these signals are much more likely to cross the attention threshold. The normal sensations of digestion, motility, and varying gut tone are noticed, evaluated, and often interpreted as symptomatic.

This hypervigilance toward gut sensations is also the mechanism underlying visceral hypersensitivity, the abnormally heightened sensitivity to gut stimuli that is a feature of IBS and functional gut disorders. The gut-brain axis operates in both directions, and the sustained anxious attention to gut sensations can both create and amplify the very symptoms that justify the attention.

The clinical picture I encounter in practice is sometimes a person who has arrived at a gastroenterology consultation convinced they have a serious gut condition, received an IBS diagnosis, and then developed significant health anxiety about that diagnosis. Or a person whose health anxiety has focused on the gut, generating enough visceral hypervigilance to produce genuine IBS symptoms, who then has those symptoms medically confirmed as a reinforcement of the original worry.

In these cases, the work of gut-directed hypnotherapy and the work of addressing health anxiety are not separate projects. They address the same underlying mechanism: a nervous system that has been running at elevated arousal, interpreting its own signals through a threat lens, and maintaining a self-sustaining cycle of alarm and monitoring.


Why Health Anxiety Is Misunderstood and Undertreated

Part of the clinical challenge with health anxiety is the name. The term “health anxiety” sits uncomfortably between the medical and psychological domains, and historically the condition has often fallen between them.

The person presenting to their GP with a fear that something is wrong is usually investigated medically. When investigations return normal, the conversation about the anxiety itself can feel dismissive, as though the concern has been ruled out along with the physical cause. The person leaves knowing their scan was clear but not understanding why the fear persists, and often feeling that the psychological dimension of their experience has not been taken seriously.

The word “hypochondria”, still in colloquial use, carries enough of a dismissive connotation that people with genuine health anxiety often avoid it as a self-descriptor. They know what they are experiencing is distressing and real. They know the physical symptoms are real. The difficulty is that the framework available to them, a medical system oriented toward physical pathology, does not fully account for what they are experiencing.

Hypnotherapy approaches health anxiety from a different starting point. The question is not whether the symptoms are real, they are. The question is what the nervous system has learned that is generating and maintaining the monitoring programme, and how that learning can be updated.


How Hypnotherapy Works for Health Anxiety

Hypnotherapy addresses health anxiety by working directly with the subconscious processes that generate and maintain it. The hypnotic state, a condition of deeply focused relaxation in which the critical analytical faculty of the conscious mind becomes quieter, provides access to the subconscious in a way that is not available through ordinary waking attention.

Here is how the clinical work unfolds.

Recalibrating the Nervous System Baseline

The most immediate effect of the hypnotic state is physiological. The parasympathetic nervous system is activated, producing measurable reductions in heart rate, breathing rate, cortisol levels, and sympathetic nervous system activity. For someone whose nervous system has been running in a sustained state of elevated arousal, repeated access to this state begins to genuinely recalibrate the baseline.

This matters clinically because many of the physical symptoms that health anxiety monitors are themselves generated by the elevated arousal. As the nervous system baseline comes down, the symptom burden often reduces alongside it. Clients frequently notice, within the early sessions, that some of the physical experiences they had been closely monitoring become less frequent or less intense. This is not suppression of sensation; it is a genuine change in the physiological conditions that were generating it.

Identifying the Origins of the Monitoring Pattern

Using Ericksonian techniques, the clinical work moves toward understanding when and how the body came to be experienced as a source of threat. For many people with health anxiety, there is an identifiable period or experience that anchored the pattern: a personal illness in childhood that was frightening or poorly explained, a parent whose ill health created an early environment in which physical symptoms were associated with danger, a significant experience of loss or medical emergency, or a period of genuine illness in the client themselves during which the monitoring developed as a rational protective response and then continued long after the original justification had resolved.

Understanding this, at the subconscious level rather than simply intellectually, allows the therapeutic work to begin revising the original conclusion. The subconscious mind, in the receptive state of hypnosis, can be introduced to a genuinely updated relationship with bodily sensation: not as signals of impending catastrophe but as the ordinary, variable, continuously shifting background of being embodied.

Reducing the Interpretive Threat Load

A central component of the hypnotherapy work is addressing the interpretation that the subconscious is applying to normal bodily signals. This is not about persuading the person to ignore real symptoms. It is about reducing the automatic catastrophic interpretation that the monitoring system is applying to ambiguous ones.

In the hypnotic state, suggestion and guided imagery are used to introduce a different relationship with physical sensation: curiosity rather than alarm, acknowledgement rather than catastrophising, trust in the body’s capacity for self-regulation rather than vigilance against its next perceived failure. These suggestions are not abstract reassurances. They are working directly on the evaluative process that the subconscious applies to incoming signals, in the state where that process is most accessible.

Clients often describe a shift in the quality of their relationship with their body that is difficult to articulate but palpable: a loosening of the watchfulness, a sense that physical sensations can simply be felt rather than interrogated. This shift is the recalibration of the monitoring system itself, not a decision to stop caring about health.

Interrupting the Reassurance Cycle

Where reassurance-seeking has become a significant part of the clinical picture, whether through repeated medical consultations, online research, or involving family members, the hypnotherapy work addresses the subconscious drivers of that behaviour directly.

The reassurance-seeking pattern is maintained because it works, briefly, to reduce anxiety. But it reinforces the underlying belief that bodily signals require external verification before they can be considered safe. Hypnotherapy works to build internal resources for tolerating the uncertainty that is inherent in embodied life, so that the absence of alarm is no longer dependent on external confirmation.

This is a meaningful shift for most people with health anxiety, and it is one that tends to occur gradually across the course of treatment rather than as a single breakthrough. Clients find, over time, that the pull toward checking, research, or consultation becomes less urgent, that they are able to notice a physical sensation and allow it to exist without immediately requiring an explanation.

Addressing Underlying Anxiety and Trauma

Health anxiety does not usually exist in isolation from a broader picture. In clinical practice, it is frequently accompanied by generalised anxiety, sleep disruption, and sometimes a history of trauma or adverse early experiences that have shaped the nervous system’s baseline sensitivity.

The hypnotherapy work with health anxiety therefore often extends to the broader anxiety landscape: reducing the general resting level of the stress response, addressing any underlying experiences that have calibrated the nervous system toward threat sensitivity, and building a felt sense of safety in the body and in ordinary life that the health anxiety has progressively eroded.

Where burnout or panic attacks are also present, these can be incorporated into the clinical plan. It is unusual for health anxiety to be a genuinely isolated presentation, and addressing the full picture tends to produce more complete and durable outcomes.


The Relationship Between Health Anxiety and the Medical System

I want to address this directly, because it has clinical significance.

Hypnotherapy for health anxiety is not an alternative to appropriate medical investigation. If you have physical symptoms that have not been adequately investigated, or if you have genuine risk factors that warrant monitoring, seeking medical attention is clinically appropriate and I would always encourage it.

What hypnotherapy addresses is the psychological and neurological mechanism that sustains health anxiety after reasonable medical investigation has not found a cause for alarm, or alongside ongoing management of a genuine condition where the anxiety has become disproportionate to the actual clinical situation.

I am always willing to liaise with treating clinicians where that is helpful. My practice receives referrals from gastroenterology consultants at OneWelbeck and The London Clinic, and communication with GPs, psychiatrists, or other specialists, where the client wishes it and where it is clinically appropriate, is something I welcome.

If you have had significant medical investigation, received broadly reassuring results, and are still experiencing the characteristic cycle of monitoring, alarm, temporary relief, and renewed monitoring, that is the pattern that hypnotherapy is specifically well-positioned to address.


What Does the Research Say?

The evidence base for hypnotherapy in anxiety disorders, including the somatic and health-focused presentations that characterise health anxiety, is well developed.

Milling, Valentiner and Alladin (2018), in a meta-analysis published in the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, found robust support for hypnotherapy across a range of anxiety presentations, with effect sizes comparable to other evidence-based treatments and consistent evidence that gains were maintained at follow-up.

Research by Kirsch, Montgomery and Sapirstein (1995) demonstrated that adding hypnosis to cognitive-behavioural approaches produced significantly superior outcomes compared to CBT alone across anxiety presentations, with the combined approach producing meaningfully larger improvements. This finding is directly relevant because CBT-based approaches, including the specific CBT protocols developed for health anxiety by Warwick and Salkovskis, are the primary evidence-based treatment for the condition.

Alladin (2012) specifically examined cognitive hypnotherapy for anxiety presentations and reported that the integration of hypnotic techniques produced superior outcomes and durable gains, with follow-up assessments showing maintained improvement. For a condition like health anxiety, where relapse is a significant clinical concern, the durability of hypnotic treatment effects is an important finding.

Neuroimaging work by Deeley and colleagues at King’s College London documented measurable changes in prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex activity during hypnosis, regions directly implicated in the emotional regulation deficits and hypervigilant attentional processing characteristic of health anxiety. The hypnotic state modulates activity in precisely the neural networks that health anxiety dysregulates.

Research by Löwe et al. (2003), examining the psychological correlates of somatic symptom burden, consistently demonstrates that the relationship between anxious attention and symptom experience is neurologically mediated and bidirectional. The implication for treatment is that approaches which reduce the anxious attentional component of symptom monitoring produce genuine reductions in symptom experience, not merely a change in how symptoms are interpreted.


What to Expect at London Hypnotics

The first session begins with a thorough clinical conversation. Health anxiety presents differently for every person who carries it, and I want to understand yours: when the pattern first developed, what the monitoring typically focuses on, what the physical symptoms involve, how the reassurance-seeking has developed, what impact the condition is having on daily life and relationships, and what you have tried previously.

I use an Ericksonian approach throughout: indirect, permissive, and tailored to you as an individual. For people with health anxiety, who are often highly attentive to their internal experience and analytically sophisticated about their own patterns, this approach tends to work particularly well. It does not require effort, performance, or the suspension of critical thinking. It simply invites the mind to become curious about what is possible when it is given permission to settle.

Most clients working on health anxiety find meaningful change across five to seven sessions, with shifts in the quality of body awareness and the urgency of monitoring often beginning in the earlier sessions, and the deeper work on the underlying calibration continuing across the fuller course. Some clients with more longstanding patterns, or where health anxiety is embedded in a broader anxiety picture, benefit from additional sessions.

Sessions are available in person at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY, a short walk from Angel and Old Street stations, and online for clients who prefer to work from home or who are based outside central London.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is health anxiety a real condition or am I just worrying too much? Health anxiety is a recognised clinical condition with a substantial research literature. The distress it causes is genuine, and the physical symptoms it generates are real. It is not a matter of worrying too much in the ordinary sense. It is a specific pattern of subconscious threat monitoring that has become miscalibrated, and it is well understood and treatable.

Will hypnotherapy make me stop caring about my health? No. The goal of hypnotherapy for health anxiety is not indifference to physical wellbeing. It is a recalibration of the monitoring system so that physical sensations are processed appropriately rather than catastrophically. Most people find, after working with health anxiety, that they respond to genuine symptoms more calmly and effectively than before, because the excessive background noise of the monitoring system is no longer obscuring the signal.

I have been told my symptoms are anxiety but they feel very real. Does that mean hypnotherapy is for me? Yes. Hypnotherapy works specifically because the symptoms are real. The physical experiences generated by health anxiety, including the elevated heart rate, the chest tightness, the digestive symptoms, the muscle tension, are genuine physiological events. Hypnotherapy addresses the neurological mechanism that is producing them. The fact that they are real does not mean they are caused by the disease that has been feared; it means they are caused by the anxiety that is looking for it.

I have actual IBS alongside health anxiety. Can you work with both? Yes. The intersection of health anxiety and functional gut disorders is one that I encounter regularly in clinical practice, given my specialism in gut-directed hypnotherapy. The mechanisms overlap significantly: the visceral hypervigilance of health anxiety and the visceral hypersensitivity of IBS are closely related, and treating them as connected rather than separate tends to produce better outcomes. I will discuss this with you in detail in the first session.

Is this different from CBT for health anxiety? CBT for health anxiety, particularly the Warwick and Salkovskis model, is the most widely researched psychological approach and has a meaningful evidence base. It works primarily at the level of cognitive restructuring and behavioural change: identifying and challenging the distorted thoughts, reducing reassurance-seeking behaviours, and building tolerance for uncertainty. Hypnotherapy’s particular contribution is access to the subconscious level, where the monitoring programme is generated, and where cognitive restructuring at the conscious level may not fully reach. For clients who have tried CBT with limited or partial effect, or who find that they understand the pattern but cannot change how it feels, hypnotherapy often addresses what CBT has not been able to.

How soon might I notice a difference? This varies between individuals. The physiological recalibration that comes from the hypnotic state often produces a noticeable shift in general anxiety level within the first few sessions. The more specific changes in body monitoring, interpretation, and reassurance-seeking tend to develop across the middle and later sessions. Most clients notice something shifting from the first session onwards, even if the full picture takes longer to consolidate.

Do you need to know where my health anxiety came from? It can be clinically useful to understand the origins, but it is not a prerequisite. Many clients do not have a clearly identifiable precipitating event. The Ericksonian approach works with whatever the subconscious presents, and meaningful change is possible regardless of whether the origin is consciously accessible or historically clear.


Taking the Next Step

Health anxiety is not a character weakness, and it is not a life sentence. It is a pattern, formed at a specific point in time, maintained by a nervous system doing its best to keep you safe. And patterns can change.

If you are in London or anywhere in the UK and would like to explore whether hypnotherapy is the right approach for you, I offer a free initial telephone consultation. There is no obligation and no pressure to proceed.

You can reach me at 020 7101 3284 or book via the link below.

Book Your Free Consultation


Antonios Koletsas is a GHSC-registered and GHR-accredited clinical hypnotherapist practising at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY. He specialises in anxiety, health anxiety, panic disorder, IBS, insomnia, and trauma-related presentations, and is trained in Ericksonian Hypnotherapy at BHRTI under Stephen Brooks.


Clinical References

Alladin, A. (2012). Cognitive hypnotherapy for major depressive disorder. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 54(4), 275–293.

Deeley, Q. et al. (2012). Modulating the default mode network using hypnosis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 60(2), 206–228.

Kirsch, I., Montgomery, G., & Sapirstein, G. (1995). Hypnosis as an adjunct to cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 63(2), 214–220.

Löwe, B., Spitzer, R. L., Gräfe, K., Kroenke, K., Quenter, A., Zipfel, S., Buchholz, C., Witte, S., & Herzog, W. (2003). Comparative validity of three screening questionnaires for DSM-IV depressive disorders and physicians’ diagnoses. Journal of Affective Disorders, 78(2), 131–140.

Milling, L. S., Valentiner, D. P., & Alladin, A. (2018). The efficacy of hypnosis as an intervention for anxiety: a meta-analytic review. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 66(4), 336–363.

NICE (2011). Generalised anxiety disorder and panic disorder in adults: management. Clinical Guideline CG113. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

Warwick, H. M. C., & Salkovskis, P. M. (1990). Hypochondriasis. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 28(2), 105–117.

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