The honest case: a low-friction practice with a modest evidence base, two clear felt wins (sleep, less wired) and a mechanism that's plausible but unproven. Outdoors is essentially free — twenty minutes of skin on grass earns you whatever the electrons are worth, plus all the well-documented benefits of being outside. Indoors is a $30 to $400 mat that needs a working ground outlet and trusts a research base built mostly by people who sell the mats. Try it for a month and judge on whether you sleep better; don't expect it to replace anything that actually treats inflammation.
The premise behind grounding is electrical. The Earth's surface holds a vast pool of free, negatively-charged electrons; your body, walled off from that pool by rubber soles and elevated indoor floors, sits at a higher voltage than it would in any of the conditions humans evolved in. When you touch bare soil, wet grass, or sand with bare skin, your body voltage clamps to the earth's. The grounding hypothesis is that some of those free electrons then flow into the body and neutralise the reactive oxygen molecules — the unpaired-electron fragments that drive inflammation when they pile up faster than the body's antioxidant machinery can clear them Oschman et al. 2015.
The honest gap: even if free electrons sit at the skin, no study has traced them to a mitochondrion or to a circulating white blood cell — the places where reactive oxygen damage actually happens. Skin is a high-resistance barrier. The current involved is tiny. The mechanism is plausible-but-unproven rather than well-characterised, and the difference matters when you're deciding how much to expect.
What the studies actually show
The total body of grounding research is about two dozen primary studies, most with fewer than fifty participants, almost all published in alternative-and-integrative-medicine journals, and a striking number written by overlapping author groups with financial ties to the companies selling grounding mats. That's the frame to read everything else through. Within that frame, the consistent finding is that something measurable changes when you put a person in conductive contact with the ground — body voltage drops, salivary cortisol shifts, self-reported sleep and pain improve. The signals are small and the methodological floor is low.
The most-cited result is the sleep study. Twelve people slept on grounded conductive sheets for eight weeks; their morning-high, evening-low cortisol pattern — the rhythm a healthy stress system runs on — moved back toward normal, and they reported falling asleep faster and waking less often Ghaly & Teplitz 2004.
The pain and stress results sit in the same boat. A pilot study put sixteen people through hard eccentric exercise, half on grounded mats and half on sham mats, and watched their muscle-damage markers and self-reported soreness over the next three days; the grounded group hurt less and showed lower creatine kinase rises Brown et al. 2010. A randomised trial of thirty-two massage therapists — a population with chronic occupational pain — reported real improvements in physical function and pain after six weeks of grounded vs sham mats Chevalier et al. 2019. A single one-hour grounded session shifted mood scores on a standard mood questionnaire in forty subjects Chevalier 2015. The blood-rheology study showed red blood cells repelling each other more after two hours of grounding, which the authors translated into a claim about cardiovascular risk that the data don't actually support Chevalier et al. 2013.
What's missing is what would settle the question: a properly-powered trial, run by a lab without a stake in the products, with verified sham fidelity and hard biological endpoints. No such study exists. No mainstream guideline body — cardiology, rheumatology, sleep medicine — has reviewed the practice. The integrative-medicine community treats it as a worthwhile adjunct Menigoz et al. 2020; the wider medical literature treats it as below the threshold worth assessing. Both responses are defensible given what's published.
How to actually do it
The standard dose across the studies is thirty to sixty minutes a day of skin-to-conductor contact, daily or near-daily. Outdoors, that means bare feet (or bare hands, or sitting with bare legs) on grass, soil, sand, or unsealed concrete — surfaces that touch the planet underneath them. Indoors, it means a conductive mat, sheet, or patch wired to your home's electrical ground.
Pick one and run it for at least four weeks before deciding whether it does anything for you. Most reported effects show up on the sleep and stress axes within the first week or two; if you feel nothing after a month of consistent daily contact, you're probably not a responder, or the contact isn't establishing the way you think it is.
When not to do it
The other risks are smaller and more obvious. Don't ground yourself outdoors during a thunderstorm — the body becomes a low-resistance path to a much bigger current than the one you're trying to use. Watch where you walk: cuts, glass, and parasitic exposure from soil in some climates are the everyday risks of going barefoot, and they're the same risks regardless of the grounding claim.
If you're on a medication with a narrow therapeutic window — blood thinners, thyroid hormone replacement, certain anti-seizure drugs — the theoretical concern is that if grounding genuinely shifts the physiology these drugs are calibrated against, your dose might need recalibration. The empirical basis for this is thin, but if you're starting nightly grounded-sheet use and you're on one of these medications, mention it at your next appointment rather than not.
What most write-ups get wrong
"Grounding blocks EMF." It doesn't, in the way most people think. A grounded mat does reduce the induced AC voltage on your body from the wiring in your walls — that part is real and measurable. It does nothing to the radio-frequency signals from your phone or your wifi router. The two get conflated constantly, especially by marketing copy and by the broader EMF-anxiety community.
"Any time outside counts." Standing on a wood deck, a dry rock outcrop, sealed asphalt, or a painted balcony provides no meaningful electrical contact with the earth's electron pool. The active ingredient is conductive material continuous with the ground underneath — grass on soil, sand at the waterline, wet dirt. "I'm outside, so I'm grounded" is wrong in most modern outdoor environments.
"Leather shoes are fine." Leather conducts moderately when it's wet and in direct contact with bare earth — the standard example is the soaked leather sole of someone walking on damp soil. In practice, almost no one wears leather-soled shoes on bare ground for long enough to matter, and the floors inside most buildings (sealed concrete, vinyl, carpet, tile on subfloor) insulate regardless of what's on your feet. "Switch to leather" doesn't restore grounding in any indoor setting.
"It treats inflammation." The literature shows modest shifts in some inflammatory markers in small studies. That's not the same as treating an inflammatory condition. Stopping a prescribed anti-inflammatory because you're sleeping on a grounding sheet is the failure mode this misconception leads to.
Why "I tried it and felt nothing"
The most common reason grounding mats deliver no effect is that they're not actually grounded. Older buildings often have two-prong outlets retrofitted with three-prong adapters that aren't connected to anything; new buildings sometimes have mis-wired outlets where the ground pin is dead or reversed. The fix is a five-dollar outlet tester from any hardware store. If the green-green-amber pattern doesn't show, the mat is decoration.
The second-most-common reason is skin contact through fabric. A grounded sheet under pajamas, socks, or a duvet is barely making contact at all. The original studies used direct skin contact with the conductive material; that's the dose.
The third is barefoot on sealed surfaces and counting it. A treated wood deck, a finished concrete patio, a balcony with a waterproof coating, an asphalt driveway — these all read as "outside" but they're insulating layers between your feet and the ground. The grass-on-soil or wet-sand version is the substance.
The fourth is short of dose. The studies that report effects use thirty to sixty minutes a day, daily, sustained for weeks. A barefoot lap of the lawn on a sunny Saturday isn't the protocol.
Finally: some people just don't respond. The literature is too thin to predict who, but if you've run a clean four-week trial with verified grounding and no felt effect, that's information — the practice doesn't do anything noticeable for you, and you're free to stop.
What you might notice
Two effects show up in the small studies and in user reports often enough to take seriously, both on a timescale of two to four weeks of consistent daily contact.
The first is sleep. People who try a grounded sheet most commonly report falling asleep faster and waking less in the night — the same outcomes that moved in the early cortisol study Ghaly & Teplitz 2004. Your partner is more likely to notice this than you are; people often don't realise how much they were waking until they stop. Within a couple of weeks the morning fog softens for some people, which is downstream of the same effect.
The second is a small drop in the wired-but-tired feeling. Less of the 11pm "should be asleep, can't quite settle" hum; less of the morning braced-for-the-day stress that some readers run on by default. The mood study saw this shift after a single hour of grounded contact Chevalier 2015; in practice the effect is subtle and easier to see in retrospect than in real time.
What's less likely to show up in the timescale claimed for it: dramatic pain reduction, visible inflammation changes, anything you'd notice on a blood test. The bigger biological claims — blood viscosity, systemic inflammation, cardiovascular risk — are made on the basis of single small studies with no replication, and shouldn't be the reason you take this up. The honest framing: a cheap experiment with a real chance of better sleep, where the bigger claims are speculation riding on a too-thin literature.
Related and worth knowing
Most of the plausible benefits of outdoor grounding ride on the things grounding makes you do — go outside, walk, stop and pay attention — and those have their own evidence base independent of any electron claim. Worth looking at separately: morning sunlight exposure for circadian timing; time in green spaces and forests (the biophilia literature has stronger trial data than grounding does); barefoot and minimalist footwear for foot mechanics; basic sleep hygiene fundamentals (cool, dark, consistent wake time), which carry far more sleep-evidence weight than any grounded sheet. If the goal is calmer mornings and easier sleep onset, those four are the higher-evidence levers; grounding is a low-cost add-on, not a replacement for any of them.
- — Both live in the bedroom-electricity wellness space with thin evidence; the reliable win in each is better sleep, not the electrical theory.
- — If you're going barefoot on the grass anyway, do it in the morning sun for a benefit that's better proven.
- — Grounding's modest sleep effect aside, simply spending two hours a week in green space is the better-evidenced move.
Substance + claimed effects
Grounding (also called earthing) is direct electrical contact between the human body and the Earth's surface — bare feet on grass, sand, soil, or unsealed concrete, or indoor contact via a conductive mat, sheet, or patch wired to a building's ground port. The premise: the Earth's surface holds a near-limitless reservoir of mobile electrons, and a body insulated from that reservoir by rubber-soled shoes and elevated indoor surfaces is electron-deficient in a way that matters biologically. Modern proponents (Clint Ober, cardiologist Stephen Sinatra, biophysicist James Oschman, researcher Gaétan Chevalier) claim that re-establishing this contact reduces systemic inflammation, lowers cortisol, improves sleep quality, reduces pain (particularly delayed-onset muscle soreness), lifts mood, decreases blood viscosity, and accelerates wound healing Chevalier et al. 2012. The claims fan across most of the catalogue's benefit dimensions; the dossier covers all of them.
Evidence by addressing question
mechanism
The proposed mechanism is electron-based antioxidation. The Earth's surface carries a negative charge maintained by global atmospheric circuit dynamics and the constant arrival of ~100 lightning strikes per second worldwide; the surface electron pool acts as an effectively infinite electrical buffer at near-zero potential. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by mitochondrial respiration and inflammatory neutrophils carry unpaired electrons; the grounding hypothesis is that conductive contact with Earth provides free electrons that neutralize these ROS and reduce downstream oxidative damage Oschman et al. 2015. A secondary mechanism invoked is the shifting of body voltage: an ungrounded indoor body floats at hundreds of volts AC induced by ambient 50/60 Hz fields, and grounding clamps it to Earth potential, which is measurable but whose biological relevance is unclear.
Mechanism gaps that the literature does not resolve: electrons entering at the skin surface have no demonstrated transport pathway to mitochondria or to circulating immune cells. The skin is a high-impedance barrier; the body's interior is electrically isolated from surface contact at any meaningful current. The claimed antioxidant effect requires electrons to reach the radicals being neutralized, and no study has traced that pathway. The mechanism is therefore best described as speculative-but-not-impossible: free electrons reaching subcutaneous tissue via sweat-mediated ion exchange is physically plausible at small scales, but the leap from there to systemic ROS reduction is unsupported by direct measurement.
evidence
The published literature is sparse, small-n, and concentrated in a narrow author cluster (Chevalier, Sinatra, Oschman, Ober) often funded by or affiliated with the commercial grounding-products industry. The aggregate body comprises roughly two dozen primary studies, most with n=10–60, mostly published in Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, Explore, and Journal of Inflammation Research. No multi-centre RCT exists; no Cochrane review exists; no major guideline body addresses the practice.
Sleep + cortisol. Ghaly & Teplitz 2004 ran an unblinded 8-week study of 12 subjects sleeping on grounded conductive sheets; salivary cortisol diurnal profiles normalized toward the expected morning-peak/evening-trough pattern, and subjects reported reduced sleep-onset time and fewer nocturnal awakenings. Sample size and lack of blinding make this hypothesis-generating, not confirmatory.
Delayed-onset muscle soreness. Brown et al. 2010: n=8 grounded vs n=8 sham after eccentric exercise; grounded group showed lower creatine kinase rise and lower self-reported soreness at 24/48/72 hours. Extremely small; needs replication.
Blood viscosity / red-cell zeta potential. Chevalier et al. 2013: n=10 subjects, two-hour grounding session, dark-field microscopy showed increased erythrocyte zeta potential and reduced red-cell aggregation. Acute physiology effect; whole-blood viscosity changes were inferred from zeta potential, not measured directly via standard hemorheology.
Mood. Chevalier 2015: n=40, one-hour grounded vs sham session; grounded group showed modest improvement on the Brief Mood Introspection Scale relative to sham. Single session, single instrument, single-author analysis.
Inflammation + wound healing. Oschman et al. 2015 reviews a series of small studies using thermal imaging and cytokine measurements that show reduced inflammatory markers and faster wound resolution under grounding. The review's authors are the same author cluster running the primary studies.
Pain / quality of life in occupational pain populations. Chevalier et al. 2019: RCT of 32 massage therapists, six weeks grounded vs sham mat, reported improvements in physical function and pain scores. Single-site, modest n, sham fidelity questionable.
Physiology. Sokal & Sokal 2011: series of controlled experiments documenting acute shifts in serum calcium, phosphorus, iron, and glucose during grounded vs ungrounded conditions. Small samples; effects not consistently replicated.
Aggregate epistemic state. Every individual study is suggestive of some physiological effect of skin contact with a grounded conductor. None has been replicated by independent labs without commercial ties to grounding products. The signal is consistent in direction (mild improvement on whatever was measured) but the methodological floor is low: small n, frequent lack of blinding, unblinded outcome assessors, soft endpoints (subjective ratings), and pervasive funding overlap. Menigoz et al. 2020 argue this body warrants integration into clinical practice; mainstream clinical bodies do not.
protocol
The standard protocol used across most studies: 30–60 minutes of direct skin contact per session, daily or near-daily, with either bare feet on bare earth (grass, soil, sand, unsealed concrete in contact with subsoil) or via a conductive mat/sheet wired to a properly grounded indoor electrical port. Conductive materials used in commercial products are typically silver-fiber-woven cotton or carbon-impregnated polymer. Indoor mats require a working ground wire (third prong on standard outlets in most countries); a ground-pin tester or earthing-rod direct connection is the most reliable verification. The night-long grounded-sheet protocol used in Ghaly & Teplitz 2004 is the highest-dose modality tested.
Sweat or moisture markedly improves skin conductivity; dry skin on grass at room humidity is high-impedance and may not establish meaningful contact. Walking barefoot on dew-wet grass or wet sand at the tide line is the most reliably conductive natural protocol.
contraindications
Outdoor barefoot grounding carries the obvious foot-injury and infection risks (cuts, punctures, parasitic exposure in some regions). Lightning is a non-trivial risk for outdoor grounding during storms; the body becomes the path of least resistance to ground. Indoor grounding mats wired to building electrical systems should not be used by people with implanted electronic medical devices (pacemakers, deep-brain stimulators, insulin pumps) without device-manufacturer clearance — the safety case is unestablished rather than established-as-dangerous, but the absence of testing in this population is the relevant fact. People taking medications with narrow therapeutic windows (warfarin, thyroid hormone, certain anti-seizure drugs) have been theorized to need dose monitoring if grounding genuinely shifts physiology; the empirical basis for this caution is thin but the prudence case stands.
misconceptions
Three misconceptions dominate. First: grounding "blocks EMF." A grounded mat reduces induced body voltage from ambient AC fields, which is real and measurable, but does not block RF (wifi, cellular) fields. The two effects are routinely conflated by marketers and by the grounding-product community. Second: shoes are the problem. Rubber soles do insulate; leather soles in contact with bare ground conduct moderately well; the practical issue is that almost all modern flooring (carpet, vinyl, sealed concrete, tile on subfloor) insulates regardless of footwear. The "wear leather shoes" prescription doesn't restore grounding in a typical apartment. Third: any "natural" outdoor contact counts. Standing on a wood deck, a dry rock outcrop, or sealed asphalt provides effectively no electrical contact with Earth's electron pool. The substance is contact with conductive material continuous with the planetary surface — soil, wet sand, grass-on-soil — not "being outside."
alternatives
The closest evidence-backed substitutes for the claimed benefits, by claim: for sleep — sleep hygiene fundamentals (dark room, cool temperature, consistent wake time) with multi-RCT support; for stress / cortisol — established practices including regular exercise, meditation, and time in nature (the "biophilia" literature, which overlaps grounding studies but isolates the visual / outdoor-air variables); for inflammation — exercise, weight loss in those with elevated BMI, and Mediterranean-pattern diet, all with stronger evidence than grounding; for mood — exercise and sunlight exposure (both with effect sizes comparable to mild antidepressants in some populations). Most of grounding's plausible benefits ride on its forcing function: time outside, barefoot walking, slow attention, all of which have independent evidence bases. The question is how much of the grounding signal is the electrons and how much is the environment that grounding requires.
failure-modes
The common screwups: (1) buying a grounding mat and plugging it into an ungrounded outlet (older buildings, two-prong adapters, mis-wired three-prong outlets — an outlet tester is the verification step). (2) Using the mat over insulating barriers (pajamas, thick socks) without realizing skin contact is required. (3) Walking barefoot on sealed surfaces (treated wood, finished concrete, painted surfaces) and counting the time as grounded. (4) Treating grounding as monotherapy for clinical inflammation or chronic pain that warrants medical evaluation, especially when self-titrating off prescribed anti-inflammatory medication based on subjective improvement.
practicalities
Outdoor grounding is free; the cost-and-friction question is purely about whether the reader's geography and schedule allow regular barefoot outdoor time. Indoor grounding products run roughly $30–60 for a small floor or desk mat, $80–200 for a fitted sheet, $200–400 for a full-bed system, with commercial brands (Earthing.com, Grounded.com) dominating. Lifespan of the conductive material is the practical recurring cost: silver-fiber sheets degrade with washing and lose conductivity within 1–3 years of regular laundering. Verification of working ground requires a $5 outlet tester (any hardware store); the absence of this check is the most common reason grounding mats deliver no measurable effect.
history
The modern grounding movement is traceable to Clint Ober, a former cable-television-industry executive who in the late 1990s observed that humans had become electrically isolated from the planet by synthetic shoe soles and elevated flooring. He partnered with Stephen Sinatra (preventive cardiologist) and James Oschman (biophysicist) to formalize the hypothesis and fund early studies; the 2010 trade book Earthing: The Most Important Health Discovery Ever? brought the practice to broad audiences. Pre-modern precedent — walking barefoot, sleeping on the ground, contact with soil — is universal across cultures but has no specific electrical-contact framing; the modern claim is distinct from generic "go outside" health advice in being specifically about Earth's electron pool as the active ingredient.
stakes
If the grounding hypothesis is correct, the modern human is in a low-grade electron-deficient state continuously — never shoeless, never on uninsulated ground — and the consequence is chronic subclinical inflammation that compounds over decades. If grounding is essentially placebo plus the indirect benefits of going outside, the cost of not doing it is whatever the alternative-route benefits (sunlight, walking, attention break) are worth, minus a small mat purchase. The asymmetry favours trying: the practice is cheap, low-risk, and rapidly self-evaluable on sleep and mood (the two outcomes most consistently reported across the literature).
payoff
The two outcomes most likely to register subjectively within days-to-weeks based on the literature: easier sleep onset / fewer nocturnal awakenings, and reduced morning cortisol-driven anxiety. Pain reduction (DOMS, chronic low-grade musculoskeletal pain) tracks the same timescale in the small studies that have measured it. Effects on harder endpoints (inflammatory biomarkers, cardiovascular outcomes, longevity) are claimed but not supported by long-term data. A 4-week self-trial — grounded sheet plus 20-min/day outdoor barefoot contact when weather permits — is the standard practitioner protocol and matches the dose used in the sleep and mood studies.
out-of-scope
Adjacent topics not covered: sun exposure and circadian alignment (separate substance, much stronger evidence); time in nature broadly construed (biophilia literature; different mechanism claims); foot health and minimalist footwear (overlaps but has its own evidence base); EMF mitigation as a distinct topic (different mechanism, separate literature, much more controversial).
The credibility range
Optimist case
Every primary study published has shown a directional effect, across a wide range of measured endpoints (sleep, cortisol, mood, pain, inflammation markers, blood rheology, wound healing). Effect sizes are modest but consistent. The mechanism — free electrons neutralizing reactive oxygen species — is consistent with established redox biology even if the transport pathway is incompletely characterized. The practice has zero monetary cost in the outdoor modality and modest cost indoors. Community signal is large and consistent (sleep and back pain are the two most-reported subjective benefits across years of forum activity). Pre-modern populations universally had skin-to-ground contact; modern populations universally don't; the natural baseline argument applies. Even if the electron-transfer mechanism is wrong, the practice forces time outside, barefoot, with slow attention — and those have independent evidence. The expected value of trying is positive at low cost.
Skeptic case
The literature is sparse, small-n, and methodologically weak: most studies have n<40, lack blinding, use subjective endpoints, and come from a tight author cluster with commercial ties to grounding products. No independent lab without conflicts of interest has replicated the headline findings. The proposed mechanism has a glaring transport gap: even if Earth's surface holds free electrons, no study has demonstrated their delivery to mitochondria or to circulating immune cells through the high-impedance skin barrier. The "shifts in serum minerals" and "blood viscosity" findings of Sokal & Sokal 2011 and Chevalier et al. 2013 have not been replicated by hematology or biochemistry labs in the standard literature. Subjective improvements in sleep and mood are exactly what placebo with strong expectancy effects produces. The practice's adoption pattern (wellness-influencer-driven, commercial-product-dependent for the indoor modality, claim-creep into cardiovascular and longevity territory) follows the standard alt-medicine trajectory. No mainstream guideline body — AHA, NICE, USPSTF, Cochrane — has assessed the practice favourably or unfavourably; it sits below the evidence threshold to be considered.
Author's call
The honest landing is mid-range with a clear weighting: the indoor electrical-mat mechanism is overclaimed and probably small-to-zero on its own merits; the outdoor barefoot-on-earth practice is worth doing on the strength of the indirect benefits (time outside, walking, attention break, sunlight exposure) regardless of whether the electron-pool mechanism is real. Evidence is weak (score 1–2). Controversy is moderate-high (active disagreement between proponents and mainstream medicine, with a clear funding pattern). Felt-experience effects on sleep and mild stress are real enough for many people that the practice earns a modest recommendation as a low-cost experiment, framed honestly: this is not strong-evidence medicine. The entry should give the optimist case its honest hearing while making the methodological floor of the literature impossible to miss.
Stakeholder + incentive map
- Commercial: Earthing.com (Ober's company), Grounded.com, and a long tail of competitors selling mats, sheets, patches, and shoes. Direct financial interest in indoor-product modality being effective. Most published primary studies have one or more authors with these ties.
- Practitioner: Integrative-medicine clinicians (Sinatra and successors), naturopathic and functional-medicine practitioners, some massage and bodywork practitioners (the population studied in Chevalier et al. 2019). Generally pro-grounding.
- Community: Large active forums and social-media community; the practice is a fixture in biohacker, paleo, and primal-living subcultures. Strong consistent self-reports on sleep and back pain.
- Skeptic / counter: Science-based-medicine writers (Stephen Barrett, Steven Novella, David Gorski), mainstream cardiology and rheumatology specialty bodies (by omission rather than active rebuttal), independent biophysicists who flag the transport-pathway gap. No commercial counter-interest of comparable scale; the skeptic position is mostly principled rather than financially motivated.
Population variability
The literature is too thin to characterize responder subgroups with any confidence. Hypothesis-level patterns that recur in clinical reports: people with chronic low-grade inflammation (autoimmune diagnoses, long-standing musculoskeletal pain) self-report larger effects than healthy adults; people with high baseline indoor-EMF exposure (urban apartments with extensive electrical wiring) report larger acute "settling" effects on first nights using a grounded sheet; older adults with disrupted sleep architecture (the population in Ghaly & Teplitz 2004) appear more responsive than young healthy sleepers. None of these patterns has been formally tested in adequately powered studies.
Geographic and lifestyle variability matters for the outdoor modality: a reader with a garden in a temperate climate has trivial barriers; a reader in a 20th-floor urban apartment in a cold climate effectively cannot do outdoor barefoot grounding for half the year. Indoor mats partially solve the geographic problem but introduce the cost, ground-verification, and questionable-mechanism issues.
Knowledge gaps
The big gaps: (1) no independent replication of the headline studies by labs without commercial ties; (2) no mechanism study tracing electron transport from skin contact to subcellular ROS; (3) no adequately-powered RCT on hard endpoints (inflammatory biomarkers, cardiovascular events, sleep architecture by polysomnography rather than self-report); (4) no head-to-head comparison of indoor grounding mat vs sham mat with verified blinding; (5) no isolation of the electron-contact variable from the time-outside / barefoot-walking confounders for outdoor grounding. A well-powered, independently-funded RCT with sham fidelity verification and inflammatory-biomarker primary endpoints would meaningfully move the credibility range; nothing of the sort is in the published literature or, to the author's knowledge, in registered trial databases.
Scope vs brief. The brief named inflammation claims, sleep, mood, stress, and evidence quality. All five are covered: sleep and mood as their own scored dimensions with payoff and evidence treatment; inflammation and stress inside mechanism and evidence rather than as separate sections, because the underlying literature is the same overlapping author cluster and the same handful of small studies — splitting it would have produced three sections quoting the same papers. Evidence quality is the spine of the whole article (named in the dek, the evidence section, the credibility-range framing throughout).
Category. Picked other. Grounding is its own thing: not light, not food, not a supplement, not a screening test, not a home product (the mat is the apparatus, not the substance). Forced into a closer category it would mislead — light would imply circadian, home would imply product review, mindset would imply lifestyle-philosophy. other is honest.
Why evidence = 1, not 2. Two would imply "sparse or contested literature; mechanism plausible but trials thin or mixed." The literature is sparse and the mechanism is plausible, but the deciding factor for the lower score is the funding-pattern overlap: most primary studies share an author cluster with direct commercial stake in the products being tested. That's a stronger discount than "thin trials" alone. Open to a bump to 2 if an independent lab publishes a replication.
Why controversy = 3. Active disagreement between integrative-medicine practitioners (who recommend it routinely) and mainstream specialty bodies (who don't engage with it at all). Not 4 because the disagreement is largely along the well-trodden alt-vs-conventional fault line rather than a paradigm fight inside a single field; not 2 because the alt camp publishes, has institutional presence, and the silence from the mainstream is itself a position.
Why stakes is omitted. Editorial call. The §5c rules require stakes to anchor a felt-experience forecast to named studies or trial endpoints. For grounding the evidence floor doesn't support that forecast honestly — claiming "your decade looks worse if you don't ground" requires longitudinal data that doesn't exist. Stakes here would have read as wellness-influencer fear-mongering on an evidence base that can't carry it. The payoff section gives the symmetric positive forecast, anchored to the small studies that exist; that's as far as the literature lets us go.
Score zeros that may surprise. beauty_direct, beauty_cumulative, longevity, focus all scored zero. None are credibly claimed by the primary literature; secondary marketing claims exist but have no supporting trials. Honest zero rather than a charity score.
Contraindications. Marked cardiac-condition for the pacemaker / implanted-device caution on indoor mats — the safety case is unestablished rather than established-as-safe, which is the relevant fact. Considered blood-thinners for the theoretical interaction with the blood-viscosity findings of Chevalier et al. 2013, but the empirical basis is too thin to mark categorically — flagged in the article body's contraindications prose instead.
Future-link candidates. Morning sunlight / circadian-alignment entry, biophilia / time-in-nature entry, minimalist-footwear / barefoot entry, sleep-hygiene fundamentals entry. The out-of-scope section already gestures at these by name; wire actual cross-links in once those entries exist.
Separate-entry candidate. EMF exposure (consumer-level RF and ELF) is the obvious adjacent topic readers will conflate with grounding (see the misconceptions section). It warrants its own entry — different mechanism claims, different evidence base, much more controversial. Flag for backlog.
Hard editorial call on the highlights. Took the candid framing ("trusts a research base built mostly by people who sell the mats") over the upbeat one. The honest framing reads better and respects the reader; the upbeat one would have crossed into the same overclaim pattern the article criticises.
Grounding (Earthing)
Outdoor barefoot contact is free. Indoor mats and grounded sheets run $30–400 one-time, with conductive material degrading over 1–3 years of washing.
30–60 minutes daily of contact; trivial willpower load. Indoor sleeping mat is zero-effort once installed. Friction is mostly seasonal/geographic for the outdoor modality.
Small but consistent subjective improvements in sleep onset, pain (DOMS in Brown et al. 2010, occupational pain in Chevalier et al. 2019), and stress reported within weeks. Effects modest; mechanism for systemic improvement is speculative.
The most-replicated subjective endpoint: Ghaly & Teplitz 2004 reported normalised diurnal cortisol and reduced sleep-onset / nocturnal-waking in n=12 grounded-sheet users over 8 weeks. Small, unblinded, but consistent with broader user reports.
Chevalier 2015 showed modest mood improvement on the Brief Mood Introspection Scale after a single grounded session (n=40 vs sham). Consistent with cortisol-normalisation findings; signal is small but directionally consistent.
Mild secondary effect on daytime energy reported by users, largely downstream of improved sleep (Ghaly & Teplitz 2004); no direct stimulant or metabolic mechanism.
Roughly two dozen small studies (n=10–60), almost all by a narrow author cluster with commercial ties to grounding products. Mechanism is speculative on the transport-to-tissue step. No independent replication, no major guideline addresses the practice.