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Bioresonance And How It Can Help You Quit Smoking

  • Jennifer Reynolds
  • Jul 14, 2024
  • 5 min read

The detrimental effects of smoking have wide-reaching consequences on your health, smoking takes a massive toll on the body, potentially exacerbating existing health problems and creating new ones! Smoking is a highly addictive activity that is a burden to millions of people all around the world, with many having tried and fad multiple times to quit.


These are just a few disturbing facts around smoking in New Zealand:

  • Currently NZ has an estimated 6.8% of adults who are daily smokers (approx. 284,000 people)[5]

  • Tobacco (and breathing in second-hand smoke) causes about 5,000 deaths every year through cancer, stroke and heart disease[1]

  • Smoking is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in New Zealand[2]

  • Nicotine has been proven to be as addictive as cocaine and heroin[3]

  • Long-term smokers will die an average of 10 to 15 years early[4]

  • There are about 4000 chemicals in tobacco smoke, more than 70 of these have been found to cause cancer[8]


Risk Factors Of Smoking

Smoking is a known contributor to a variety of health problems, heart problems in particular, are especially prevalent due to the direct narrowing effect smoking has on a person’s blood vessels, which can result in heart attack or heart failure, which often results in life-threatening symptoms.  Here are just a few of the risk factors associated with smoking.

  • Smoking can disturb the normal heart rhythm/heart rate is increased

  • Smoking elevates blood pressure levels

  • Plague builds up in arteries due to the inflammation caused by smoking

  • Smoking leads to lower levels of HDL cholesterol and higher levels of LDL cholesterol

  • Smoking causes the blood to thicken, which results in less oxygen being carried throughout the body


Why Is It So Hard To Quit Smoking?

According to Smokefree NZ nicotine triggers the release of feel-good chemicals in the brain. The constant exposure to nicotine continually stimulates parts of your brain, so it gets used to having nicotine around. Over time, this stimulated response becomes the new “normal” for your brain, or in other words, you feel like you need nicotine just to feel okay.


When it comes to quitting smoking, it is not something you can just cut back on, you need to stop completely to reset your body and get it used to operating without nicotine. Because nicotine is so addictive (as addictive as cocaine or heroin [3]), people who attempt to just cut back tend to see an increase in cravings and end up facing uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms, resulting in them drawing even harder on their reduced number of cigarettes breathing in more harmful chemicals.


How Do You Quit Smoking Then?

The commitment to a smoke-free life requires more than just discontinuing the physical act of smoking, it requires a determined psychological commitment to stop, along with the proper support and finding the best strategies that works for you.


While some people have success with traditional approaches to quitting smoking, such as Nicotine Replacement Therapies (based on controlled nicotine exposure and reduction over time), or prescription drugs such as nortriptyline and zyban, and even behavioural treatment counselling, these methods aren’t effective for everyone. This is where alternative approaches to addiction treatment have gained traction, with one popular contender - Bioresonance therapy.


What Is Bioresonance Therapy?

Bioresonance therapy is a non-invasive complementary health technique that studies have shown can help individuals quit smoking[7]. Based on the concept that all human cells emit specific frequencies, and that disease/illness/addiction can occur if these frequencies are disrupted.[6] Bioresonance therapy looks to identify these electromagnetic waves or ‘disruptions’ and restore the balance within the body’s energy fields, thereby assisting the body in returning to optimum health. More on bioresonance and how it works here.


Bioresonance therapy is used for a variety of health issues but is particularly popular for those seeking to quit smoking. The goal with smokers is to use bioresonance to neutralise the pathological frequencies associated with nicotine addiction and, in doing so reduce the associated cravings and withdrawal symptoms.


How Does Bioresonance Therapy Work To Stop Smoking?

Using Bioresonance therapy, the frequency pattern of nicotine is effectively reversed or cancelled (similar to the concept behind noise-cancelling headphones). This allows the body to more easily ‘forget’ its physical memory of its nicotine response and return to its pre-addiction state.


Worldwide, thousands and thousands of people have managed to successfully give up smoking using Bioresonance therapy, it has even featured on mainstream TV such as the BBC News, This Morning Programme UK and Close up NZ. Watch the video below from BBC News for some insight into the Bioresonance therapy process and how it can help you quit smoking.


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Many people who have failed at previous attempts to quit smoking have been successful and stopped using Bioresonance therapy method, which has a 70%+ success rate (dependent on how many sessions you attend) - exceeding other methods currently available.


A recent study published by the National Library of Medicine concluded Bioresonance therapy was found to be effective in smoking cessation without the presence of any adverse side effects [7]. The study was conducted in 2014 and involved a total of 190 participants, half of whom underwent Bioresonance therapy and the other half of whom were part of a placebo group. After one week, 77.2% of the smokers in the Bioresonance therapy group gave up smoking, compared with 54.8% in the placebo group. After one year, these results settled at 28.6% of smokers in the bioresonance group had completely given up smoking, compared with only 16.1% of the smokers in the placebo group.


For the millions of people trying to quit smoking, research finds Bioresonance therapy to be one of the most effective treatment options[7]. If you’re struggling with quitting smoking, it is worth considering Bioresonance therapy; the only criteria to qualify for it is your determination to quit!


What About Vaping?

Vaping is the use of electronic devices that heat liquids turning them into vapour which is then inhaled in a similar manner to smoking. The difference between smoking and vaping is that smoking delivers the nicotine by burning tobacco, whereas vaping delivers nicotine and other substances via aerosols or vapour.


Concerns around vaping and its effects have led to it being banned in some countries. The risks and long term effects of vaping are as yet unknown, however it is probably safe to say that even though vaping is being sold as less harmful option, it is unlikely to be totally harm-free to people over the longer term. Ideally, smokers who have taken up vaping to quit smoking should look at vaping as an interim solution with the view to eventually stop vaping too.


Want to work towards freeing yourself from smoking/vaping? Made up your mind to stop now? 70%+ success rate internationally with the BICOM Bioresonance device within one session! Improve your health and save money with BICOM Bioresonance therapy with Infinity Health and Wellness. Book online today!


 

References:

1.Ministry of Health. (2004). Looking upstream: Causes of death cross-classified by risk and condition, New Zealand 1997. Wellington: Ministry of Health. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15782864/ 

2. Tobias, M., & Turley, M. (2005). Causes of death classified by risk and condition, New Zealand 1997. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 29, 5-12.

3. Moxham J. (2000). Nicotine addiction. National library of Medicine. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1117526/ 

4. Vineis, P., Alavanja, M., Buffler, P., Fontham, E., Franceschi, S., Gao, Y.T., et al. (2004). Tobacco and cancer: Recent epidemiological evidence. Journal of National Cancer Institute, 21st century hazards of smoking and benefits of cessation in the United States. New England Journal of Medicine, 368, 341-350.

5. Ministry of Health. (2022). Annual Update of Key Results 2021/22: New Zealand Health Survey. Wellington: Ministry of Health. https://www.phcc.org.nz/briefing/smoking-prevalence-and-trends-key-findings-202223-nz-health-survey

6. Mohsen Jafari, Mohammad Hasanzadeh, Cell-specific frequency as a new hallmark to early detection of cancer and efficient therapy: Recording of cancer voice as a new horizon, Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0753332219353922 

7. Pihtili A, Galle M, Cuhadaroglu C, Kilicaslan Z, Issever H, Erkan F, Cagatay T, Gulbaran Z. Evidence for the efficacy of a bioresonance method in smoking cessation: a pilot study. Forsch Komplementmed. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25231565/ 

8. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). (2012). A review of human carcinogens. Personal habits and indoor combustions. https://www.smokefree.org.nz/smoking-its-effects/health-effects 

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