Information medicine

Information medicine is a medical concept based on the assumption that healing does not occur solely through material agents, but primarily through the targeted transfer of information to the organism. The aim is to support the body's own regulation via subtle or energetic impulses.


Information medicine combines modern findings from quantum physics, biophysics and systems biology with holistic and energetic healing methods. At its core is the idea that every living system is controlled by information – at the cellular level as well as in the entire organism.

Fundamentals of Information Medicine

In conventional medicine, the focus is on biochemical processes, i.e. on active substances that achieve an effect through chemical reactions. Information medicine expands this understanding to include the level of information transfer, which is also central to health.

Every cell in the body communicates via electrical, electromagnetic and biophotonic signals. These signals contain information about the state of the body, control cellular processes and influence energy flow. If this communication becomes unbalanced, it can lead to dysregulation, blockages and disease.

Information medicine addresses precisely this issue: it aims to correct disrupted information flows, restore energetic order and thereby activate the body’s self-healing powers.

Key principles of information medicine

  • Everything is information: matter, energy and consciousness are different forms of expression of information. Every illness is therefore also an ‘information disturbance’ in the human system.
  • Self-regulation through impulses: The therapy does not primarily involve chemical agents, but rather the targeted transmission of corrective information.
  • Energetic communication: The body is viewed as a network in which every cell, organ and structure communicates with each other via light, vibration or frequency.

This way of thinking is closely linked to concepts from quantum physics, in particular to the model that reality does not consist solely of matter, but is also shaped by observation, consciousness and information.

Typical methods of information medicine

Information medicine encompasses various methods, each of which uses different means of information transfer:

  • Bioresonance method: Uses the body’s own frequency patterns and modifies them to feed healing information back to the body.
  • Biophoton therapy: Uses the light that cells naturally emit to obtain information about health status or transmit healing signals.
  • Homeopathy: Potentiated substances act on an energetic level, without any material active ingredient, purely as sources of information.
  • Vibration and frequency therapy: Transmits specific frequency patterns (e.g. via electrodes, light or magnetic fields) to activate resonance processes in the body.

Advantages of information medicine

  • No side effects: Since no chemical substances are used, undesirable side effects are rare.
  • Holistic: Information medicine views humans as a unity of body, mind and soul.
  • Regulating rather than suppressing: symptoms are not merely combated, but recognised in their deeper context and harmonised./li>
  • Individually customisable: Modern devices enable tailor-made diagnoses and therapy programmes based on the individual’s energy status.

Information medicine is suitable for prevention, functional disorders (such as exhaustion, restlessness, sleep problems) and for accompanying chronic illnesses. It can also be valuable in trauma therapy, cell regeneration or for unclear symptoms.

Scientific classification

While many aspects of information medicine have not yet been proven in traditional evidence-based studies, biophysical and systemic approaches are becoming increasingly important in medicine. Research on biophotons (e.g. by Fritz-Albert Popp) and quantum biology provides evidence that information, vibration and light play essential control functions in living organisms.

Information medicine is therefore often regarded as the future model for integrative, non-invasive and highly individualised medicine.

Significance for regulatory medicine

Information medicine is a central element of regulative medicine. It offers the possibility of precisely identifying regulatory disorders and treating them in a targeted manner – without interfering with biochemical processes. The body’s self-healing powers are stimulated by gentle impulses, which is particularly important in the case of chronic and functional diseases.

Conclusion

Information medicine stands for a modern, subtle form of medicine that is not limited to matter, but focuses on controlling the human system through information and energy. It combines ancient wisdom with new scientific findings and opens up innovative avenues for diagnosis, therapy and prevention. As part of regulative medicine, it is a powerful complement to conventional medicine – individual, holistic and future-oriented.