Who Are BradCliff Practitioners & What Do They Do?
- 21 January 2026
Working with breathing is powerful, yet complex.
As breathing continues to feature prominently across clinical practice, research, and wider health conversations, reinforcing the need for skilled, professional-led care is of utmost importance.
What Makes BradCliff Different?
Effective care requires practitioners to:
- Recognise clinical red flags
- Understand underlying respiratory, neurological, biochemical, biomechanical, and psychosocial drivers
- Individually tailor programmes, rather than applying generic techniques
- BradCliff practitioners are trained to do exactly this.
Built on Experience. Refined by Evidence.
The BradCliff Method draws on over 40 years of clinical experience, representing approximately 40,000 clients treated across our clinics for breathing dysfunction, breathing pattern disorders, and hyperventilation syndrome.
Over time, techniques and methodologies have been:
- Extensively trialled
- Critically evaluated
- Retained only if clinically reproducible and effective
Who Are BradCliff?
The BradCliff Breathing Method® is internationally recognised within the medical and allied health professions for the assessment and treatment of Breathing Pattern Disorder (BPD), dysfunctional breathing, and Hyperventilation Syndrome.
As breathwork continues to grow in popularity, BradCliff stands apart. Our method is research-based and taught exclusively to qualified health professionals, ensuring breathing interventions are delivered safely, clinically, and with precision. While many practitioners now include breathing re-education in their work, BradCliff is distinct in both its clinical depth and professional standards.
Only a small number of techniques 'made the grade'; these are the methods taught today. Even the sequences used within the BradCliff framework are grounded in a clear clinical rationale, rigorously tested and refined over decades.
This work is underpinned by a thorough review of the research and clinical literature, ensuring practice remains both evidence-based and clinically relevant.
This truly is an extraordinary field to be part of.
Be part of a profession-led community advancing the science and practice of breathing.

