Television, Newspaper & Internet Coverage
July 2005
Two Journalists were interviewed who had personally had the treatment, Loaded Magazine's Martin Pashley, who had been smoking for 17 years and smoked up to 40 a day and Nina Goswami from the Daily Telegraph, who smoked 20 a day and also wrote an article about her treatment.
Both journalists spoke about how the treatment resulted in their bodies de-toxifying and rejecting the Nicotine after one session . The treatment takes the body back to how it was before you had your first cigarette. Neither of the journalists have returned to smoking and have not felt the need to smoke even around others who are smoking.
Martin Pashley had been smoking 30 to 40 cigarettes a day and had tried and failed to stop smoking over the last three years commented “It feels like the addiction is gone. ..I feel a lot healthier.”
The program approached the treatment with an investigative and critical attitude, giving a brief description about Bioresonance and it's recent developments. Explaining how a Polish doctor who was using Bioresonance to treat allergies and provide detoxification treatment, realised that it could be used to encourage the body to detoxify from Nicotine. This resulted in the quit smoking treatment where many thousands of people successfully gave up in Poland and other parts of Europe.
Daily Telegraph
Article by Nina Goswami: June 2005
This "bioresonance" therapy developed in Germany 25 years ago to combat allergies such as hayfever and conditions such as eczema.
The bioresonance therapy gets rid of cravings by reverting the body's frequency back to what it would have been if you were a non-smoker . In the past three years 10,000 people in Poland and Ireland have undergone the therapy.
The computer works out the electromagnetic pattern of the nicotine. It will invert the energy pattern of your addiction and that pattern will be sent through your body via the electrodes to cancel out the nicotine energy. The resonance of your body then becomes that of a non-smoker.
Walking home, at the point when I would normally light up a cigarette, I was happy to go without.
The following evening I had drinks with two friends who are heavy smokers, but still I was not tempted.Then came two of the most demanding weeks of my journalistic life to date: covering Live 8, and then the London bombings. I've been stressed, tired, and often in the company of chain-smoking journalists, but not once have I felt the urge to light up.
June 2006
Bioresonance Therapy could be the best smoking treatment yet.
We sent someone to try it out. Matt Bradfield, News Editor at MSN Uk was smoking 20 cigarettes a day. He had "tried everything to give up" Patches, chewing gum, Allen Carr and cold turkey. All with no success. After trying Biroresonance Therapy he was able to give up smoking.
"Normally, the first thing I would do after exiting a building I had occupied for more than an hour would be to reach for a nicotine stick and light it up without further ado. I'm happy to report that I didn't. In fact, the rest of the day and the evening passed without my lips and a cigarette meeting once. It was a very strange sensation, my head was certainly making me aware of the fact that it hadn't had a fix for a while and what was I going to do about it? My body, meanwhile, felt almost serene and didn't seem to be craving nicotine at all, there is something in bioresonance that certainly seems to work (more so than with any other treatment or therapy I have tried in the past)". MSN Health Report.