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9:40am Wednesday 9th December 2009 in
HEALTH checks for the worried well are big business for private clinics and let’s face it – a consultation with your GP these days is barely enough time to discus your backache or flu let alone consider any potential ailments.
But a Poole-based company has taken the concept one step further and has developed a pioneering new system that claims to help the body to heal itself.
Although it might sound far-fetched, local practitioner Manjula Coté who uses the Nutri-Energetics System (NES) says she has been getting fantastic results and invites me a long for a consultation.
Manjula is a qualified nutritionist based at Lilliput Health Clinic. On her desk next to a computer is what looks like a large computer mouse but is in fact, Manjula explains, a specialist body scanner. This high-tech device can provide a quick, non-invasive assessment of my human body field to find any “distortions” which are then displayed on the computer screen via a traffic light system.
“It’s not a medical diagnosis – it helps to identify an area of weakness before it becomes a problem. A lot of it relates to emotional matters too,” explains Manjula and invites me to place my hand on the scanner and think about what I would like to achieve from our consultation.
After a few minutes various little diagrams representing major organs and things like circulation and immunity flash up on the computer screen. Some are underlined in green, a couple in yellow and a few in red. It’s quite a lot to get your head around, but according to the creators of this system, the body fields are the body’s master control system.
The NES approach works by identifying any misalignments which are then corrected via a prescription of infoceuticals (more on these later).
Health benefits are said to include improved well-being, deep restful sleep, more energy, improved digestion, calmer emotions and improved blood sugar regulation. Co-creator of NES, Harry Massey who lives in Poole, claims he successfully rid his body of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome using the NES approach.
During my consultation Manjula also asks me lots of detailed questions about my diet, lifestyle, state of mind and even goes back to my family’s health history too.
“It’s a holistic way of working,” she explains. “Health problems don’t happen in isolation – these things are all connected so it’s important to see the full picture before you can treat it.”
Following my consultation, I’m prescribed three infoceuticals with scientific sounding names like Polarity, ED3 cell driver and ED7 lung driver. Apparently an infoceutical is not chemical (herbal, nutritional or pharmceutical) in make-up and it’s not a homeopathic preparation or flower essence either. It contains “information encrypted collodial minerals” which are designed to “activate the body’s natural healing and detoxification processes”.
I’m instructed to start off with six drops of each one in separate glasses of water building up over the next two weeks to 28 drops each day. Manjula also emails me a personalised nutritional plan in which she suggests some changes in diet and supplements as well as some recipes.
Although it’s probably not the best time of year to be embarking on a healthier eating regime, it might help limit some of the damage caused by the excesses of the festive season which has got to be a good thing!
An initial consultation costs £65 but Echo readers can get a £25 discount on presentation of a print-out of this article. For a free-15 minute introduction to NES, call Manjula on 01202 725090.
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