Fundamentals of Bioregulatory Medicine
Health Building Approach: Bioregulatory Medicine shifts the emphasis from diagnosing and treating diseases towards facilitation and strengthening one’s inherent health resources.
Bioindividualised Approach: Bioregulatory medicine treats patients, not their diseases. The bioregulatory physician first evaluates the biological and pathological uniqueness of each patient, in order to define one’s personalised pathological algorithm. Dr Bosh then focuses on therapeutic probabilities and possibilities for correcting all detected health disruptors and strengthening correlated health weaknesses of her patients.
Homeostatic and Allostatic Approach: The primary objective of Bioregulatory Medicine is to support and regulate homeostasis and allostasis – since these self-regulatory mechanisms have innate capacities to heal, regenerate and restore one’s optimal health.
Integrative Interdisciplinary Approach: Bioregulatory Medicine is primarily based on the achievements of evidence-based contemporary medicine. Yet, it mainly operates within the framework of Quantum Physics, Open System Theory, Systems Biology, Psychosomatic medicine and Epigenetics – to integrate conventional medicine with traditional knowledge preserved within complementary and alternative medicine (CAM).
Non-Linear Approach: Rather than exclusively choosing the conventional ‘one disease-one aetiology’ linear approach, the bioregulatory approach also views diseases as imbalances of a systems’ network. It, therefore, approaches a patient as an open biological system in a nonlinear and analogical way, in order to facilitate the optimal flow of bio information along with all human energy-psycho-physiological networks.
Meta-Systemic Approach: Bioregulation is an interdisciplinary, homeostatic and meta-systemic therapeutic process. It simultaneously explores and facilitates auto-regulatory mechanisms on different levels and aspects of health (psychological, physiological, postural, biochemical, bioenergetic and environmental aspects) and harmonises their inter-correlations.
Multifactorial Approach: Instead of a conventional linear approach, Bioregulatory Medicine favours a multifactorial therapeutic approach, as it better matches an open flow of bio-information within living systems. The essential part of the bioregulatory assessment is the identification of the most pathological inner and outer health disruptors, specific to each patient. Bioregulatory treatments are then devised to therapeutically neutralise those factors of health disruption and counteract their cumulative and toxic-synergistic impact on one’s health.
Psychosomatic Approach: The Bioregulatory Psychosomatic approach is based on Dr Bosh’s understanding that the psychosomatic process is an evolutionary process of any illness or pathology – including even traumas and congenital diseases. She questions extends and redefines the conventional medical understanding of the psyche, stress, aetiology (the origin of diseases) and pathophysiology (development of diseases) – believing that the commonly practised palliative approach (suppressing symptoms) is the main reason for global health decline and worldwide increase of morbidity and pandemics.
Process Approach: Bioregulatory treatment is a therapeutic process, and it is therefore time-consuming. The bioregulatory therapeutic process aims to rehydrate, re-mineralise, detoxify, re-energise, restore a patient’s specific structural resistances and postural misalignments – as well as to provide psychotherapeutic support and guidance towards resolutions of inner conflicts, necessary for a healthy lifestyle and optimal personal development.