Rife technology

The Rife story is an involved, bitterly disputed story, generally distorted with fanciful embroideries and has reached near mythic proportions in some accounts of his life and work. Moreover much of the supposed teaching and documentary material in circulation about Rife comes from people who are trying to promote their own me-too versions of the Rife machine and their documentary evidence is often suspect, to say the least.

Rife was unarguably a brilliant technician. He was hired by Henry Timken, an industrial magnate, and under Timken’s sponsorship produced the most technologically advanced speedboat marine engine of the day (1915), generating 2700 HP.

Rife went on with Timken’s support to develop microscopes and almost perfected the art, producing compounded quartz prisms in a glycerine bath, which gave resolutions of up to 50,000 diameters; this was at a time when the best commercial laboratory microscopes could give only up to 2,000 diameters. Rife’s Universal Microscope was without doubt the greatest optical instrument ever designed; no-one can seriously question this aspect of Rife’s work.

It’s what he SAW that started the acrimony and disputation.

Read more on my Rife pages, starting here Rife Machines

Cell phone radiation protection

For those of you who missed the recent teleseminar (12th Feb 2008) about the Guardian protection products, click this link and listen here. (there will be another one March 12th)

Guardian protection products teleseminar

In the meantime, for those of you who asked, here is the link I want you to use to get their products:

Order Cell Phone Guardian and other products

Here is a thermal image scan of a brain being overheated by cellphone radiation:

thermalheating

Light healing devices

You may have heard of low-level laser healing. Stories are that now in India surgeons use these devices more than they operate for certain conditions!

However we don’t need lasers to get healing. We are, by nature, “light beings”, meaning that we emanate biological light (see the Acuvision post).

A few years ago, scientists at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee harnessed the healing power of light with the help of technology developed for NASA’s Space Shuttle. They used powerful light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, originally designed to grow plants in space, to heal wounds and produce other miraculous recoveries.

LEDs don’t heat the tissues the way lasers do; because LED uses longer wavelength (redder) near-infrared light, it penetrates the tissues deeper.

The LED healing devices certainly works against hard-to-heal wounds, such as diabetic skin ulcers, serious burns, and severe oral sores caused by chemotherapy and radiation. A wound-healing device was placed on the submarine USS Salt Lake City, and doctors reported 50-percent faster healing of crew members’ lacerations when exposed to the LED light. Injuries treated with the LEDs healed in seven days, while untreated injuries took 14 days.

The wound-healing devices are a small, 3.5-inch by 4.5-inch (89-millimeter by 114-millimeter), portable flat array of LEDs, arranged in rows on the top of a small box. Biologists have found that cells exposed to near-infrared light from LEDs, which is energy just outside the visible range, grow 150 to 200 percent faster than cells not stimulated by such light. The light arrays increase energy inside cells that speed up the healing process.

diod.gif

Readers will probably think right away about the Russian SCENAR (or SKENAR), a small hand-held device that uses electromagnetic therapy for fast amazing healing.

One of the great applications has been the rapid healing of painful mouth ulcers caused by cancer therapies such as radiation and chemotherapy. This is a very miserable condition, sometimes so uncomfortable the patient cannot eat and has to be fed IV.

Now the treatment is quick and painless. A nurse practitioner places the box of LEDs on the outside of the patient’s cheek about one minute each day. The red light penetrates to the inside of the mouth, where it seems to promote wound healing and prevent further sores in the patient’s mouth.

Clinical trials are ongoing.

The device also has healing possibilities where certain chemo agents are sent to the tumor selectively and then activated by infrared light transdermally. It has already had great success in kids with brain tumors.

Of course you can expect Big Pharma to attack the effectiveness of something so simple. They want to sell more chemo drugs, not heal lives.

Still, this is a development well worth following. I’ll keep you posted.

NOTE: The Bemer 3000 uses similar LED therapy, coupled with their patented and very effective Bemer frequencies.

EPFX under fire as a credible device

And that will bring discredit to many healing machines I know work.

FDA bans import of ‘miracle machines’ headline from the SEATTLE TIMES

I’m no fan of Bill Nelson and his greedy empire centered around the EPFX (formerly QXCI). Even less so now. His goading of the FDA is likely to lead to heavy attacks on a great many good people and numerous more worthy devices than his overpriced trinket box, which now costs $19,900 (probably less than $100 to manufacture).

The rest of this post continues with an edited-down version of a recent article in the Seattle Times. The picture is frighteningly clear, gruesome (and was totally avoidable). The sad thing is I agree with a lot of what is said. Alternative medicine is often just a cover for the same kind of unscrupulous greed that the medical profession displays, just as craven, just as jealously guarded and just as full of the hypocrisy and “holier than thou” B*S*.

One of the EPFX’s definitely fraudulent claims that keeps coming up is that it was used on members of the U.S. cycling team during the 2003 and 2007 Tour de France. Jeffrey Spencer, a chiropractor for champion cyclist Lance Armstrong, denies he ever used it on Armstrong.

Now the FDA is trying to shut down Nelson’s medical-device empire, by blocking the import of the machine which (they say) he claims can cure diseases such as cancer and AIDS. More likely it’s wildly enthusiastic amateurs that said this, IMHO. The desktop device, called the EPFX, is manufactured in Hungary by William Nelson, who fled the U.S. in 1996 after he was indicted on felony fraud charges related to his invention.

FDA compliance director Timothy Ulatowski, who oversees medical-device regulation, said the action is the first step in a sweeping investigation of Nelson, his distributors and EPFX operators. The intention is to shut down Nelson’s distributor network. For the time being they are not going after existing devices.

The largest distributor, The Quantum Alliance, is in Calgary, Alberta. The FDA are meeting with Canadian counterparts, to see what action can be taken (to try to subvert Canada’s democratic freedom, presumably!).

The FDA says many EPFX operators dupe patients by posing as highly trained health-care professionals through the use of deceptive credentials and degrees from unaccredited institutions. I can only comment and say that my attempt to offer decent and meaningful certificates of training in such devices (not exclusively the EPFX) was met with the cold shoulder and the distributor’s own mickey-mouse training and “biofeedback certification”. Draw your own conclusions.

The sleazy Seattle Times and its sanctimonious posturing claims to have revealed how manufacturers and operators used unproven devices — some illegal, some dangerous — to misdiagnose diseases, divert critically ill people from life-saving care, and drain their bank accounts. The usual story. Bad journalists overlooking the fact that orthodox medical treatment now kills more people in the USA than the top disease does.

The Seattle Times (not the FDA note) claims these patients are casualties in the growing field called “energy medicine” — alternative therapies based on the belief that the body has energy fields that can be manipulated to improve health—implying that this is a hoax, despite the VOLUME of science that says otherwise.

Another device got dragged into the net, which is the PAP-IMI, a 260-pound electromagnetic pulsing machine, possibly linked to patient injuries and death. The devices, made in Greece by inventor Panos Pappas, were smuggled into the U.S. as seed germinators. They remain in use today in at least five states. The FDA will take action against the PAP-IMI, but won’t give details of when and how.

The trouble is, as I said, that many good folk will fall to this purge. The FDA is now going to be looking into committees of medical professionals called institutional review boards, or IRBs. These Review boards are required to oversee the design and safety of clinical studies. Scores of private companies sell IRB services, which offer the promise of quick study approval and oversight for as little as a few thousand dollars.

The medical devices involved in clinical studies will be included in the investigation being conducted by a U.S. House Energy and Commerce subcommittee, which oversees the FDA. Rep. Jay Inslee, D-Wash., requested the expanded investigation. He wants to eliminate “IRB shopping,” in which a device maker can hire a private overseer for a study. The FDA does not track most of the studies. [doesn’t track the crappy studies from drug companies either – in fact what DOES it do?]

Rep. Bart Stupak, subcommittee chairman, and Rep. John Dingell, chairman of the full committee and a subcommittee member, said in a statement that FDA regulations may not adequately protect the public. Both are Michigan Democrats. They are apparently concerned that “Americans are being duped by dangerous, unproven devices that illegally claim to diagnose, treat and even cure their illnesses.”

Actually my impression is that Americans need protecting from their own federal regulators, who know as little about honesty and integrity as they seem to know about health issues.

FDA approval for SCENAR

Just a note to let readers know that Pacific Health Options are the only group in the whole of North America with FDA approval for the SCENAR. Don’t let Dr Jerry Tennant or others tell you different. Tennant doesn’t have a SCENAR but clearly sees it as competition for his own knock off device and wrote to me that the Hache’s don’t have FDA approval and they have an “honesty” problem.

Well, who has the honesty problem? I have seen the Hache’s FDA documentation and here is a note from John Hache with their details for anyone to peruse:

Dear Keith,
This is a copy of our registration with the FDA.

We are registered under HCC5050 (Biofeedback), exempt from 510(K) as type II medical device. For full FDA approval, we would have to register as a TENS device, which is something for the future, with proper funding but has its restrictions as you know – TENS devices need to be scripted.

You will notice that 5-Element Therapeutics Inc. is the company name that it is registered under. This company is ours, though we now operate under the name of Pacific Health Options Inc., we have kept 5-Element Therapeutics operational because of our registration with diverse programs.

This is important and so I thought I would blog you the facts as they are coming to me. Basically, others are bringing in the SCENAR under the FDA radar and leaning on the Hache’s note. Write and thank them!

SCENAR for everyday ills

Couldn’t resist reporting just a simple application.

All this week my lovely wife Vivien has been working in Los Angeles (she’s a fashion designer). She had a respiratory infection and felt rough enough for antibiotics. However she was still suffering when she came home Friday night. I broke out the SCENAR and ran it over her chest and back. Within 5 minutes there was what the Russians called an “asymmetry”: one the left side there was pain under the tip of the scapula and over the pecs at the front. We worked this for about 10 minutes.

That’s all! She reported feeling tons better. All night she didn’t cough and woke feeling much better.

Who needs antibiotics when you have this device!

[more about the SCENAR]

SCENAR teleseminar

expert scenar

A good teleseminar last night I thought. Thanks to John and Lorraine Hache for insightful information about what has to be one of the number one sensations of the last decade. I myself introduced the term “Star Trek Medicine” for the SCENAR. The idea of a simple handheld electronic device capable of packing so much healing power made me think of the one that “Bones” (Dr McCoy) carried in the TV series. You can catch part of the recording at: Scenar Teleseminar

See SCENAR page