In one of his latest investigations into junk medical science, Dr. Barrett addressed a process known as bioresonance hair testing. Practitioners use a device "based on the pseudoscience of radionics to analyze hair samples mailed in by customers" to "detect nutritional deficiencies; overexposure to heavy metals; and food and environmental intolerances” to serve as a “roadmap to better health.” He calls the practice preposterous, in that “hair analysis is not reliable for evaluating the nutritional status of individuals” as well as giving several other reasons why it doesn’t work.
An earlier article on the same subject he warned its use by “chiropractors, nutrition consultants, physicians who do chelation therapy, and other misguided practitioners who claim that hair analyses can help them diagnose a wide variety of health problems and can be used as the basis for prescribing supplements.”
Since bioresonance is based on radionics, it gets even more “preposterous.” These theories supposedly rely on quantum entanglement, a central principle of quantum physics where information can be transmitted instantaneously at a distance apparently violating the speed of light. Quantum physics is arcane and incomprehensible to non-scientists, yet many questionable products use it to explain action at a distance to add a scientific-sounding aura to their sales pitch. But it's all bogus.
Then it gets more unrealistic. According to this site, “Radionics can be used for humans, animals and agriculture by means of radionic instruments which amplify and 'balance' the subtle energy field of the subject” by using “a photograph, hair snippet or other biological sample.” It works best with a good quality digital photograph because “the image stores the information of the subject and a digital file cannot be contaminated like a biological sample can,” and the light “creates a crystallization of the energy matrix of the subject.”
Another site says, it’s “a method of healing and diagnosing at a distance using the unique extra-sensory faculties of the operator supported and amplified by a physical instrument, device, geometric pattern, energy or substance.” Since “every person's energy patterns, frequencies, signatures, vibrations or rhythms are as unique to them as their fingerprints,” they can easily detect and help correct any type of “illness, injury, infection, stress, pollution, malnutrition, or poor hygiene.”
In summary, “patients” send a full digital picture or some strands of hair. "Doctors,” using their powers of ESP, run it through their energy detection machine, make a diagnosis based on an individual energy matrix, vibrations and rhythms and recommend supplements to cure what ails them, all using the magic of quantum physics. Remember, the same technique applies to their pets or their houseplants – with a separate charge for each.
But that’s not all! In some cases, their house may be causing the problem due to the presence of “geopathic stress,” which messes with the occupants’ health. That, too, can be cured at a distance by sending a photograph and using the above technique.
This seems so outlandish that I can’t help wondering who would be taken in by it. Then I see the statement that radionics can be a “supplement to other complementary and Subtle Energy therapies especially Homeopathy, Acupuncture, Reiki,” and it all becomes clear.
CBS might mock citizens of the nineteenth century for buying Stanley’s snake oil concoctions or for making a millionaire of Albert Abrams (1864-1924), developer of devices that were the precursors of today’s radionics, but they needn’t look far to find twenty-first-century parallels.
Arthur C. Clark wrote, “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,” but come on, people! These scams are packaged as advanced technology and sold to people who want to believe in magic.
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