Submitted by Sr. George’s Dragon

On page 3 of Monday’s Nation is an advertisement by the Natural Medical Centre titled “Get Well for Less”. Presumably this is a medical establishment advertising its professional services? Among the list of its offerings are MRBA full body scans and 3D NLBA organ scans. Intrigued, as I had never heard of these medical procedures, I Googled to find out more.
Incredibly, MRBA (Magnetic Resonance Bio-Analyzer) scans and 3D NLBA (Non-Linear Bio-Analyzer) scans seem both to be performed using the same piece of equipment – an A/O Analyzer made by Innergy Development. The operator’s manual is HERE.
MRBA is apparently “a non-invasive, full body analyzer that scan(s) 21 major areas of the body covering over 270 bodily functions”. NLBA “presents detailed visual reports of the health status of all the organs, systems and tissue of the body”.
According to the manual the “electromagnetic signals emitted by the human body represent a specific condition of the human body…… under different conditions of health, the emitted electromagnetic signals … are out of their normal range.” The machine is said to be able to “scan and measure a series of known functions and their healthy electromagnetic ranges”. It does this by the “patient” being connected to the A/O Analyzer either by a two wrist cables (MRBA) or a Bio-Analyzing Headset (NLBA) which looks like a pair of headphones.
How does it measure these signals with such accuracy and with so few connections to the body? Page 13 of the manual has a highlighted box which says that “Science has developed sensitive instruments that can detect the minute energy fields around the human body. One of these is the SQUID magnetometer which is capable of detecting tiny bio-magnetic fields associated with physiological activities in the body.” Interestingly, SQUIDS (superconducting quantum interference devices) do exist. They are sensitive detectors which only work if cooled to a few degrees off minus 270 centigrade with liquid helium or nitrogen. That means a lot of equipment and huge amounts of power. I see no evidence that the A/O Analyzer contains such a device. Why the potentially misleading reference to SQUIDs, then, if the A/O Analyzer does not contain one?
The real magic of the A/O Analyzer, though, is its apparent ability to heal the body. The “Remedy Reprinter” uses “frequency therapy” which allows “the organ to begin to reset the normal healthy frequency”. Miraculously, the Analyzer also “allows for the imprinting of healthy frequency information into any object, such as water, alcohol tinctures, sugar blanks, even items like rings, bracelets, necklaces”.
So what is the basic science behind the A/O Analyzer’s ability to cure disease? Apparently, it’s Radionics, a system of alternative medicine developed by Dr. Albert Abrams. From Wikipedia – “Albert Abrams (1863–1924) was an American doctor, well known during his life for inventing machines which he claimed could diagnose and cure almost any disease. These claims were challenged from the outset. Towards the end of his life, and again shortly after his death, his claims were conclusively demonstrated to be both false and intentionally deceptive.”
According to the Natural Medical Centre’s website, they have four Practitioners. Only one of them seems to be on the Barbados “List of Persons Registered as Medical Practitioners” (as at 31st January 2013 – latest version I can find). One other is titled Doctor but presumably only because he has a Ph D in a subject unrecognised for the purposes of being on the registered list.
The advertisement in the Nation promises that the Natural Medical Centre will help me get well. If the A/O Analyzer is based on “false and intentionally deceptive” claims, I guess I could seek a “Medical Doctor Consultation” with their registered Doctor. Interestingly, the Medical Profession Act 2010 bans registered doctors from advertising. How then are they able to list this in the advertisement?
“Proper” doctors are banned from advertising but those using devices based on “false and intentionally deceptive” claims are able to do what they want. Something is wrong, surely.






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