Your Questions, Answered
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No.
Bioresonance is used as an educational and supportive tool. It helps interpret patterns and responses but does not diagnose medical conditions or replace testing. -
This is individual.
Many people notice benefits within the first few sessions, but ongoing sessions provide more clarity as the underlying patterns that do not change are the ones to focus on.
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Sometimes — if it’s appropriate.
Support is chosen deliberately, based on what the body is showing and how it’s responding. In some cases, combining approaches early is helpful. In others, a more staged approach makes sense.
There’s no fixed formula.
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Decisions are guided by:
your history and symptoms
clinical observation
iridology and bioresonance findings
how your body responds over time
Treatment follows understanding — not the other way around.
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I don’t work from condition-based protocols. I focus on understanding patterns, responses and contributing factors that influence health. This allows care to be individual rather than formulaic.
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We adjust.
If something isn’t useful, it’s changed. If another approach or practitioner would be more appropriate, I’ll tell you.
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No.
Care evolves. You’re not locked into a protocol or pathway. Recommendations are reviewed as your body responds.
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Often, yes.
Many people seek this approach when symptoms haven’t made sense or haven’t responded as expected. That’s usually where interpretation becomes most valuable.
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No. If you’re unsure, this can be discussed during your appointment. Support is guided by what’s most appropriate, not by what was booked.
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Yes. Some people book individual therapies such as bioresonance or Alpha-Stim on their own. Others benefit from a combination. The approach is flexible and guided by response.
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This varies. A common starting point for therapies such as bioresonance or Alpha-Stim is weekly sessions for around a month, followed by reassessment. Ongoing support is individual.
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Will this work for my condition?
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No. These therapies do not replace medical assessment or treatment. If medical care or referral is needed, this will always be recommended.
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Yes. Care is guided by observation, clinical reasoning, experience, and appropriate use of supportive tools. It is not protocol-driven.
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You can, but many therapies work best when response is observed over time. A short series often provides clearer information than a single session.
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Many of the approaches used are gentle and adaptable. Suitability can be discussed on an individual basis