Bioresonance is a wellness-information modality that uses electronic equipment to measure subtle electromagnetic patterns associated with the human body and to translate those patterns into wellness recommendations. The conceptual framework draws on the broader bioenergetic field — the idea that biological systems carry coherent energetic signatures that can be sensed, mapped, and supported.
What a bioresonance practitioner actually does in practice: the client sits comfortably while small sensors are placed on their skin (typically wrists, ankles, or specific reflex points). The bioresonance device runs a measurement cycle of a few minutes, then produces a readout — typically a graph or set of indicators that the practitioner interprets in conversation with the client. The conversation that follows pairs the readings with lifestyle and self-care recommendations: sleep, food, hydration, movement, stress management.
Bioresonance is a contested category in the United States. The scientific evidence for the specific claims of various bioresonance device manufacturers is generally weak, and the FDA has issued warnings against specific device claims in the medical context. Harmonika Institute teaches bioresonance explicitly within a non-medical wellness scope: we do not teach diagnosis, we do not teach medical treatment, and we are explicit with students that the modality's claims are debated.
What graduates can do legally and ethically is offer reflective wellness consultations — a structured conversation that uses bioresonance readings as one of several inputs into a broader lifestyle and wellness recommendation. Many of our graduates combine bioresonance with naturopathy, herbalism, or coaching credentials, where the bioresonance reading serves as a conversation-opener for a deeper wellness consultation.