2
3
IASIS merely shares this data for your information as
food for thought and judicious consideration of the
appropriate 10/20 site pairings (however many or few
site pairings depending upon one’s level of “perceived
reactivity,” or the number of sessions the patient/client
has received).
The 10/20 May be Sucient
. In fact, it is the perception of IASIS along with
many ICP’s, doctors, clinicians and researchers, that the
standard 10/20 site pairings, and in most cases, fewer
site pairings, may be completely sucient in achieving
equal or greater benefit than the full 10/20 site pairings,
or the specific additional site pairings offered in the
Advanced Training. The decision to utilize such site
pairings are situational and based on appropriateness,
when Advanced IASIS Protocols may be used following
the basic site pairs being utilized. It’s all about training,
knowledge and critical discernment.
Less is Way More
. Additionally, in the initial session and earlier sessions
to follow, fewer site pairs are utilized to ensure that one
is suitable (according to what we refer to as “Measures of
Reactivity”) for additional site pairs and higher potency
protocols.
At 3 picowatts of power, or three trillionths of a watt or
one millionth (or so) of a cell phone, the gentle energy
emanating from the IASIS EEG C-2 unit is consid-
ered nano-energy, nearly homeopathic in nature. To
remember the frequency of the signal to the patient,
add the frequency plus the offset (dominant frequency
is 10 hertz, and the offset is 4 hertz, the frequency is 14
hertz).
Julie Onton, Ph.D., has stated the latest evidence shows
that IASIS energy isn’t even penetrating the brain, and
is likely mediating its effects via pathways in the superfi-
cial moist tissues beneath the skin that effectively trans-
port the micro signal from IASIS.
We suspect a person needs more stimulation when
they don’t feel the effects as strong or the effects are
not lasting as long as they had been.
First Things First
. Have every patient/client complete and sign a
consent and arbitration form. This is urged to help you
protect yourself and to establish a safe container for
your patient/client. It also gives you ample information
to assist you before you choose a protocol and goes a
long way to educate your patient/client, and additionally
helps in establishing appropriate expectation from your
initial session onward.
Crucial Verbal Intake
. Conduct the IASIS verbal intake for each patient/
client noting fragility vs hardiness for each element (1
head, 2 gut, 3 sleep, 4 hyper-acousis, 5 photo-phobia,
and all additional (6-?) remarkable symptoms). Do so
prior to commencing with an IASIS session each and
every time before starting. (Again, looking deeply at
“Measures of Reactivity,” which will inform our decisions
as to how to choose the appropriate protocol based on
our Guidelines of Care.) Three qualities to assess before
administering MCN: sensitivity, reactivity and hardiness.
Areas of Intake: diagnosis/symptoms, medication/sup-
plements, history of seizure, concussion, headache or
migraine, family history, genetics.
Measures of reactivity related to intake: head, gut, sleep,
hyper-acousis/photo phobia, anxiety, depression, illness.
Self-Observation: Subjective Reality as Measurement
. Have the patient/client offer (in that moment) a
numeric value to the remarkable symptoms they’re
aware of and mention between 0-10. In this way, it
will be possible to make mention of the percentage of
change from pre- to post-IASIS that day. This is crucial
for “buy-in” from your patient/client.
In the Beginning
. Always begin the first session with the “Genesis”
protocol even if your verbal intake has led you to believe
your patient/client to be hardy. Due to the fact that
there are some who are “late reactors,” we must use
extreme care (to the best of our ability) to not bring
about a reaction.
There are numerous, seeming contradictions here. For
example, “A sub-set of every reaction is a response.”
While we believe this to be true, we never intend to
bring about a reaction (an unfavorable outcome); rather
to support the occurrence of a positive response result-
ing in the perceived experience for a patient/client of a
reduction in symptoms (toward “enduring sustainabil-
ity”).
Brainwave frequency ranges:
delta 0-4 hz sleep
theta 4-8 hz half awake, half sleep
alpha 8-12 hz relaxed, alert
beta 12-20 hz active thinking
gamma 20-60 hz (varies) integrating brain function
Increasing Protocol Level
. Knowing that less is more, keep in the front of
your mind that once you have a response, that you
need not increase your protocol selection.
Should you not observe any signs of reactivity you
may choose to increase your protocol during the next
session. In some instances, where according to the
measures of reactivity you observe and believe the
patient/client to be suciently hardy, you may choose
to increase the protocol in the same session, but never
on the first session, and rarely prior to the fifth or sixth
session. You must track your patient/client over at least
this period of time to ensure their hardiness and CNS
stability to endure such an inner-session shift. To do so
earlier would be highly imprudent and irresponsible. In
assessing the number of exposures to administer during
the initial session, give exposures until client or clinician
sees a shift; or a fixed number as an upper response
(anticipating a delayed response). If during an initial
session one feels very relaxed, stop to avoid overstim.
If a client comes in stating they felt no effect, review the
observation sheet results and assess behavior via assess-
ment from the time of the last session.
The Cumulative Nature of IASIS
. Share with patients/clients that IASIS is cumulative
and over time may lead to enduring sustainability.
It’s essential that you set up reasonable, realistic,
measurable and achievable goals. This is where your
faith in the technology is of paramount importance.
Without it, you’re going nowhere. Explain that the
number of sessions is relative to numerous factors; that
everyone’s brain and CNS is extremely different.
The factors that distinguish stronger from weaker
protocols are: off-set, changes in signal complexity, and
the strength of the stimulation.
Benefits of MCN:
a) posture
b) smiling
c) alert, energized
d) sitting still, quieter
e) deeper voice
f) deep breath
g) vision sharper or brighter
h) tingling, warmth
i) headache lessening
j) non-specific (“movement”, “shifting”,
“opening”, feeling “grounded”)
Conditions for which IASIS MCN has been found helpful:
1. emotional
a) anxiety: including PTSD, addiction, autism,
OCD
b) depression: unipolar/ bipolar
2. cognitive—ADD, cognitive decline of the el-
derly, TBI
3. eruptive—anger, h/a, seizures, autism, Tou-
rettes, tics