Home > Guide Print this page

Buyers Guide to Energy Medicine Equipment


Today there is growing choice and diverse range of therapeutic devices available in the UK. Although this is good, our experience shows that this can all too easily lead to confusion and much wasted time for therapists trying to find a device suited to their needs. This site aims to simplify your choice and explain in plain English what equipment is available, how it performs in practice and what is suited to whom.

The authors of this guide are experienced energy medicine practitioners and its content is based on their experience and findings along with feedback from this site. Long experience has shown us that energy medicine devices can significantly enhance the therapists practice in terms client care and income. Rather than taking over from the therapist role, equipment should compliment skills, accelerating evaluation procedures, clarifying complex cases and enhancing the healing process. The role of the therapist has never been more needed; the time and care you offer your clients is of up most value. We at EMReview are interested in enhancing the quality and accuracy of the holistic evaluation, treatment process and practitioner health.

We have divided this web site into a number of sections.

  Evaluation Treatment Protection
  Instruments that evaluate the health state of the client through various means ranging from temperature measurements, blood saliva and urine analysis to acupuncture point balance evaluation. 
If you want to find the reason for your clients health issues and then determine the course of action, look here.
Devices that treat the body to aid recovery and accelerate the healing process. These include laser, magnetic therapy, bio-resonance and aqua devices.
With most of these devices you do not need to know precisely why someone has a health problem or fully understand what ailments they have in order to use them. They can be used to treat general or specific symptoms by themselves.
Devices that protect the practitioner from negative energies radiated from clients and the environment. They are designed to maintain the practitioner's well being. These range from small personal protection devices to water treatment and air purification devices. All practitioners need to protect and look after their well-being in order to be fit enough to help others.
  Evaluation guide >> Treatment Guide >> Protection Guide >>
       
What can be achieved
The range of equipment available today allows practitioners to quickly and effectively evaluate someone's base nutritional status, hormone balance, toxicity levels, blood state, organ functional health etc in a matter of minutes. Causative factors such as parasites, heavy metals, geographic stress, chemicals, foci etc can also be  investigated. Instruments can assess the suitability of nutritional, homoeopathic, herbal and other remedies for individuals. Laser, light, audio, magnetic, bio-resonance and other devices can dramatically accelerate the healing process. There are a lot of choices and directions in which you can go. Getting this right is important.

Choosing Equipment
The main question you need to ask yourself when selecting equipment are:

  1. What is it that you wish to achieve in business and practitioner term? Where are you heading? What motivates you? Being clear in what you want and being keen for it significantly helps you to get there. For example you may be looking to branching out and expand the range of treatments you offer or to enhance your skills in a specific discipline. 
  2. How do you prefer to work as a practitioner? Do you like to be able to be in control of evaluating the cause of a clients ill-health and choose their remedies or does the prospect of a fully automated piece of equipment doing this for you appeal? May be you would prefer something in the middle.
  3. What qualifications, skills and experience do you have? Some equipment requires a good understanding of anatomy, physiology and specific therapies, whilst others require general knowledge and can be used as required.
  4. How ethericaly do you like to work? Some equipment works at an intention level using very subtle energy processes whilst others use more physical and explainable processes. What level would you be comfortable with?
  5. Budget. Professional energy medicine equipment often costs thousands of pounds and can be a significant investment. Owning the wrong piece of equipment can be a disheartening experience. Having equipment that compliments the way you work, helps you achieve your goals and you feel good about promoting will bring many rewards in terms of job satisfaction, finance and client care.

Questions to ask the suppliers
Professional energy medicine equipment can cost thousands of pounds and your livelihood can come to depend on it, not to mention your clients health. There are some basic questions you should ask your supplier before purchasing any equipment, obviously some questions may not apply for certain pieces of equipment.

  1. Equipment demonstration. It is vital that you see the equipment in use at least twice and be personally screened or treated by it. We would also advise that you speak to three current users of the device before deciding (ask the supplier about satisfied users, they should have some!).
     
  2. Training. Find out how many days training are supplied with the machine and what additional training is available. Is there a structure to the training? For professional health evaluation and treatment devices, one days training is unlikely to put you in a position of being fully competent and have a full understanding of the potential of the device. An important part of training is the clinical practice; knowing what buttons to press is one thing, clinically working with and prescribing to clients is another. What clinical application is included with the training? Are there certificates of competence?
     
  3. Technical support. If the piece of equipment you decide on is connected to a computer it is vital that the supplier can give you effective support from the UK. The more complex the piece of equipment the more support you may require. Your livelihood could end up depending on this piece of equipment working and if there is no one available for a week or two to fix any problems this could become a major issue. Some suppliers offer and equipment 'swap out' option where if your peace equipment goes wrong they will give you a replacement while yours is been fixed.
     
  4. Support groups. These are groups of established practitioners using particular pieces of equipment. These groups can offer invaluable help, support and information about using equipment, often over the Internet. What groups are available?
     
  5. Spares. As with all equipment parts can and do go wrong and they will need to be replaced. Cables and batteries are particularly vulnerable. What stock of spares is carried by the supplier and what bits tend to go wrong (there is always something)? How much do these bits cost?
     
  6. Upgrades. If your piece of equipment uses computer software or has plug-in information cartridges then the manufacturer is likely to introduce upgrades. Find out what upgrades you are entitled to and for how many years this will apply. If there are more advanced pieces of equipment in the range how much will it cost to upgrade from one to another?
     
  7. Warranty. What is covered and what is not covered and for how long?

Copyright emreview.org.uk 2004. All rights reserved. Disclaimer

Home > Guide Print this page