Absolutely. Right here, these practices themselves don't require so much the therapist or the clinician. We do want to provide the instruction and ensure that everything we suggest is evidence based. These practices, of course, are ancient history and are increasingly being validated in the current conventions of randomized controlled trials that we heard about earlier, and indeed have actually been shown to have direct effects on the brain and body through the neuroimaging approaches that were also referenced earlier.
There is a good evidence base for these approaches and there have actually been no contraindications for them. There's really no research to suggest that meditation practice is going to lead to worse outcomes.
It has to be done right. Sometimes while sitting quietly with your emotions, difficult things are going to come up, for sure. We need the right education around how to address symptom occurrences that come during meditation. The same would occur, for example, while sitting quietly and reading a book or watching TV. It's really not that any of these practices are going to lead to harm, and quite likely they are going to lead to some benefit.
I would think that, yes, it would be quite reasonable to recommend it.