What Is HeartMath Biofeedback and How Does It Work?

Tim Hayden

Co-Founder

Tim is passionate about serving others, leading people to Christ, and more specifically breaking the stigma of addiction and mental health in the Church and across the world. Tim merges his desire to further the Kingdom with 18 years of experience in the Corporate IT world where his background has ranged from working for small startups to leading national teams at global software companies. Tim graduated from Mount Vernon Nazarene University with a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration, Marketing, and Communications. Tim and his wife are active in their church community serving in the youth department, marriage mentoring, and life group mentoring. In his spare time, Tim enjoys spending time with his family in the great outdoors camping, mountain biking, and snowboarding. “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.” – John Wesley
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Some people have heard of biofeedback or neurofeedback. But HeartMathℱ biofeedback is still a term that draws blank stares, even though the research behind it has been building for decades, and the results are hard to ignore.

If you’re in recovery, if you’ve dealt with trauma, or if your nervous system has spent years running in survival mode, understanding HeartMathℱ might change the way you think about healing.

HeartMathℱ is a form of biofeedback that measures heart rate variability to help regulate the nervous system. Here’s how it works and why it’s being used in trauma and addiction treatment.

What Is Biofeedback and How Is It Different from Talk Therapy?

Biofeedback is a technique that uses real-time physiological data to help people learn how to regulate their body’s stress response. Instead of talking through what happened, you’re watching what your body is doing, right now, in this moment, and learning to shift it.

The most common form people encounter in mental health treatment is neurofeedback, which measures brainwave activity. It’s been used for ADHD, PTSD, anxiety, and addiction for years.

HeartMathℱ operates on a different channel entirely: the heart.

What Does HeartMathℱ Actually Measure?

HeartMathℱ biofeedback is built around heart rate variability (HRV). That’s the variation in time between each heartbeat, and it’s a surprisingly powerful window into the state of your nervous system [1]

A healthy heart doesn’t beat like a metronome. It speeds up slightly when you inhale and slows down when you exhale. That subtle rhythm, or the loss of it, tells clinicians a lot about how regulated or dysregulated your autonomic nervous system is.

When someone is stuck in chronic stress, trauma response, or addiction, their HRV patterns tend to be chaotic or flat. The heart loses that natural rhythm. HeartMath’sℱ tools measure this in real time and show users a visual representation of their heart’s coherence—essentially, how smooth and ordered that rhythm is [1]

How Does HeartMath Help Regulate the Nervous System?

The vagus nerve, which runs from the brainstem down through the heart and gut, is one of the primary regulators of the nervous system’s threat response. When trauma keeps a person locked in fight-or-flight, vagal tone drops. The body remains primed for danger even when none is present [2].

Traditional therapies focused on cognitive restructuring can be valuable, but research shows non-responsiveness to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for PTSD can be as high as 50%. Cognitive approaches engage the mind, but sometimes overlook the deeply intertwined nature of emotional and physiological dysregulation [3].

HeartMathℱ works on the physiological side of that equation. By practicing specific breathing techniques and intentionally shifting toward positive emotional states while watching their HRV in real time, people can directly train their nervous system to move out of dysregulation—not through insight alone, but through the body [2].

When combined with CBT, HRV coherence biofeedback has been shown to provide additional benefit by facilitating cognitive skill-building and regulating emotional and physiological functioning [4].

Is HeartMathℱ Backed by Science?

Yes, and the evidence base has grown significantly in recent years. In 2025, over 20 new independent research papers were published based on HeartMath research and HRV coherence training. The HeartMathℱ Institute, a nonprofit research organization, has produced work cited hundreds of times in clinical and academic settings [4].

A study published in JAMA Network Open found that HRV coherence biofeedback helped the heart respond more effectively during mental or emotional stress, particularly in people with coronary artery disease [5].

For trauma and PTSD specifically, HRV biofeedback interventions have shown potential for reducing symptoms of anxiety, depression, PTSD, chronic pain, and insomnia—conditions that frequently co-occur with addiction [6].

What Does a HeartMathℱ Session Actually Look Like?

A HeartMathℱ session doesn’t look like lying on a couch and talking. It looks more like a training session:

  • The Setup: A sensor clips to your earlobe or finger and connects to a device or screen. You can see your heart rhythm displayed in real time.

  • The Practice: A clinician guides you through HeartMath’sℱ core technique: slowing your breathing to a specific rhythm while deliberately generating a positive emotional state, such as appreciation or calm.

  • The Shift: As you practice, you can watch your rhythm shift. Incoherent, jagged patterns begin to smooth out. The feedback is immediate and concrete, which is part of why it works well for men who are more comfortable with data than with discussing emotions.

Over time, the goal is for that regulated state to become more accessible outside of sessions—a trained response rather than something you only access in a clinical setting.

HeartMathℱ for Men: Trauma and Addiction Recovery in Arizona

Addiction and trauma are rarely separate issues. Most men who walk into treatment carry both, and the nervous system dysregulation that ties them together often goes untreated when therapy focuses only on thoughts and behaviors.

HeartMathℱ addresses what’s happening below the surface: the chronic activation, the disrupted sleep, the emotional volatility, the hair-trigger stress response. It trains the body to find calmness and gives men a measurable, skill-based way to build emotional regulation without having to talk through every hard thing they’ve ever experienced.

At AnchorPoint Recovery, a Christian rehab center for men, HeartMathℱ is one of the tools we use alongside Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), Internal Family Systems (IFS), and our NeuroFaithℱ model to address the full picture of addiction and heal the mind, body, and spirit.

If you’re ready to find out what recovery can actually look like, we’re here. Contact us or visit anchorpointcenter.com to learn more.

Sources 

[1]  Shaffer, F., et al. (2017). An overview of heart rate variability metrics and norms. Frontiers in Public Health, 5, 258

[2] Schneider, M., et al. (2020). Autonomic dysfunction in posttraumatic stress disorder indexed by heart rate variability: A meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, 50(12).

[3] Schrader, C., et al. (2024). Emotion regulation and heart rate variability may identify the optimal posttraumatic stress disorder treatment. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 15, 1331569.

[4] Goessl, V. C., et al. (2017). The effect of heart rate variability biofeedback training on stress and anxiety: A meta-analysis. Psychological Medicine, 47(15).

[5] Shah, A. J., et al. (2025). Heart rate variability biofeedback and mental stress myocardial flow reserve: A randomized clinical trial. JAMA Network Open, 8(10), e2538416

[6] Pizzoli, S. F. M., et al. (2024). Heart rate variability biofeedback as a treatment for military PTSD: A meta-analysis. Military Medicine, 189(9–10), e1903.

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