Researchers in China followed 330 people with early-stage, sporadic (non-inherited) Parkinson's disease for an average of 3.5 years. They split them into two groups: 143 people who attended tai chi classes for one hour, twice a week, and 187 people who received standard care but did no structured exercise. Disease progression was formally assessed at the start and at three follow-up points. This is an observational cohort study — participants were not randomly assigned to groups, which means the researchers cannot fully rule out that the tai chi group was, on average, healthier or more motivated from the start. That's an important caution when weighing the results.
The findings were striking across a broad range of symptoms. The tai chi group maintained far better motor function — including walking ability and balance — while the control group declined faster. Cognitive decline was also slower in the tai chi group. Beyond movement, the researchers tracked non-motor symptoms such as sleep quality, autonomic function (urinary and bowel control), and mood. Tai chi practitioners did better on all of these. They also needed lower doses of medication over time and had fewer complications such as dyskinesia (involuntary, uncontrolled movements) and hallucinations.
For someone living with Parkinson's, this is encouraging but not a green light to replace medication or physiotherapy. What makes it notable is the length of follow-up — most previous tai chi studies were short-term. This is the first to show benefits sustained over several years. The authors describe the results as hinting at potential "disease-modifying" effects, meaning tai chi might slow progression itself, not just mask symptoms — but that claim would need a proper randomised controlled trial to confirm. In practical terms: this is solid evidence to bring to your neurologist or physiotherapist as justification for adding tai chi to your care plan, particularly if you are in the early stages of the disease.