
How Bioresonance Integrates with Natural Health Practices — A Clinical Perspective
Bioresonance is most valuable when integrated thoughtfully into an existing clinical framework – used as a 'clinical hub' that adds an electromagnetic layer of information to traditional case-taking, naturopathic assessment, nutrition, herbal medicine and homoeopathy. The practitioner's clinical reasoning, not the device, is what makes it useful.
One of the most common questions Jenny Blondel is asked by practitioners new to bioresonance is: "How does it actually fit into what I already do?" It is a good question, and one that deserves a careful answer – because the answer is not simply "add it to your consultation" or "use it instead of your existing assessment tools."
Bioresonance is most valuable when thoughtfully integrated into an existing clinical framework. This article explores how that integration works in practice, drawing on three decades of clinical experience in naturopathy and bioresonance.
Bioresonance As A Clinical Hub
In Jenny's practice, bioresonance functions as a "clinical hub" – a tool that connects and contextualises information from multiple sources. Rather than replacing case-taking, observation, and naturopathic assessment, it adds a layer of electromagnetic information that can confirm, challenge, or deepen the clinical picture.
A naturopath working with a patient presenting with chronic fatigue, for example, might use bioresonance to assess regulatory stressors – heavy metal burden, viral loads, environmental allergens, or imbalances in specific organ systems – that are not visible on standard blood panels. The bioresonance findings do not replace the blood work. They sit alongside it, adding a dimension of information that informs the treatment plan.
This is the integrative approach the Bioresonance Institute teaches. Not bioresonance instead of naturopathy – bioresonance alongside it.
Integration with Naturopathy and Nutrition
For naturopaths and nutritionists, bioresonance offers a method of identifying potential underlying contributors to chronic illness with a precision that dietary and lifestyle assessment alone cannot always achieve. Heavy metal burden, environmental allergens, hidden pathogenic loads, and regulatory imbalances can be assessed electromagnetically – allowing practitioners to tailor detox protocols, nutritional interventions, and herbal prescriptions with greater specificity.
In Jenny's practice, bioresonance findings routinely inform decisions about which herbs to prescribe, which nutritional supplements to prioritise, and which dietary interventions are most likely to be effective for a given patient at a given time. The device does not make those decisions. The practitioner does – informed by a richer clinical picture.
Integration with Homoeopathy
For homoeopaths, bioresonance offers a method of "energetic drug testing" – using the device to determine which homoeopathic potency resonates most effectively with the patient's current energetic state. This can increase the precision of prescribing and reduce the trial-and-error that is sometimes inherent in homeopathic practice.
The principle is consistent with homoeopathic philosophy: that the body responds to information at an energetic level, and that the right information – delivered at the right frequency and potency – can support a healing response.
Integration with Acupuncture and Meridian-Based Practice
Acupuncturists and practitioners working with meridian-based assessment can use bioresonance to evaluate the state of the meridian system without needles. Electrodermal testing at acupuncture points provides information about the flow of Qi and the functional state of associated organs – information that can guide both acupuncture treatment and broader clinical decision-making.
The connection between bioresonance and meridian theory is not incidental. The foundational work of Dr Reinhold Voll in the 1950s was explicitly built on the relationship between acupuncture meridians and measurable electrical resistance at the skin. Modern bioresonance devices carry that lineage forward.
The Importance of Clinical Reasoning
The single most important thing Jenny teaches practitioners is this: bioresonance is a tool. It produces information. What you do with that information depends entirely on your clinical reasoning – your ability to take a thorough history, observe the patient carefully, ask the questions that matter, and integrate electromagnetic findings with everything else you know about that person.
A practitioner with strong clinical reasoning and a bioresonance device is a powerful combination. A practitioner who relies on the device to do the thinking is not.
This is why the Bioresonance Institute's training programs prioritise clinical reasoning above protocol knowledge. Protocols are a starting point. Clinical judgement is what makes them useful.
Regulatory and Ethical Considerations
Practitioners in Australia are required to comply with TGA guidelines regarding the claims that can be made about bioresonance therapy. This includes strict limits on representations relating to specific serious conditions, including those listed in Schedule 4 of the Therapeutic Goods Regulations.
Jenny's experience with TGA compliance – including a regulatory review of her own content in 2020 – has given her a practical, grounded understanding of what ethical bioresonance communication looks like in the Australian context. The Institute teaches practitioners to communicate the value of bioresonance clearly and honestly, within the boundaries of what the evidence supports and what the regulations permit.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can bioresonance replace conventional medical testing?
No. Bioresonance is a complementary modality. It is not a substitute for conventional medical assessment, diagnosis or treatment. In practice, it sits alongside conventional testing and case-taking, adding an additional layer of information.
How long does a bioresonance session take?
Sessions typically run between 45 minutes and 90 minutes, depending on the case and the practitioner's approach. Initial consultations are usually longer than follow-up sessions.
How does bioresonance relate to naturopathic case-taking?
In Jenny Blondel's framework, bioresonance functions as a 'clinical hub' – a tool that connects and contextualises information from case history, observation, and physical assessment. It deepens the clinical picture rather than replacing existing assessment methods.
A Note from Jenny Blondel
"The practitioners I have seen get the most out of bioresonance are the ones who bring their whole clinical self to the work. They don't abandon their naturopathic training when they sit down at the device. They use it. The device gives them more information. Their training tells them what to do with it."
– Jenny Blondel


