TY - JOUR AU - Özgen, Elif PY - 2026 DA - 2026/03/02 TI - Embodied Rituals and Healing Practices in Turkish Health Culture: Implications for Contemporary Healthcare Environments JO - OBM Integrative and Complementary Medicine SP - 010 VL - 11 IS - 01 AB - Throughout human history, movement has functioned not only as a physical activity but also as a ritual, considered a healing practice linked to meaning-making and social balance. Bodily performances and ritual-based practices—such as folk dances and mystical rituals—have historically supported the physical and emotional integrity of individuals. This paper examines the historical continuity of movement-based performative practices in Turkish health culture through religious and mystical rituals, folk dances, and music-associated healing traditions. The present analysis is structured around the relationships among ritual, movement, healing, and space, employing a conceptual, historical-comparative, and interpretive framework that draws on performance studies, health anthropology, art therapies, and architectural theory. The historical trajectory—from ancient rhythmic body practices to the multisensory spatial arrangements of Seljuk and Ottoman hospitals, and to contemporary complementary health approaches—reveals the continuity of healing through bodily experience and spatial interaction. Findings indicate that ritual components such as rhythm, repetition, breath, and centering can inform design strategies that promote sensory regulation, body awareness, and emotional balance in contemporary wellness spaces. Spatial elements, including music, soundscape, natural light, and rhythmic circulation, are highlighted as influential in shaping the healing experience. This interdisciplinary inquiry argues that embodied ritual and movement practices rooted in Turkish health culture provide a conceptual basis for human-centered, healing-oriented spatial approaches within contemporary health structures, emphasizing analytical design principles rather than reproducing cultural practices as a descriptive background. SN - 2573-4393 UR - https://doi.org/10.21926/obm.icm.2601010 DO - 10.21926/obm.icm.2601010 ID - Özgen2026 ER -