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Biotech / Medical : OTC:BB- JRSE

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To: abigney who wrote (37)10/22/1998 4:44:00 PM
From: Lance  Read Replies (1) of 72
 
Alex as I was writing my interpretation of the JR technology and what it does, I called JRSE to confirm a few things and Patti Sayih who now works at the clinic happened to answer. She is mentioned in post #128 which is an article that was written in the Palm Beach Post that I included below. Keep in mind Pioneer Services is now JRSE. For a prospectus that contains more detailed information of the technology and what it does , call 1 800 913-9767 and you may want to call JRSE at 561 477-8020. I will rewrite the post that I was working on before AOL so rudely logged me off while I was on the phone and post it later today or tomorrow. After talking to Patti about the positive effects Jacobson Resonance has had on people treated , including her own son I felt compelled to post this first !
By BOB FRENCH Staff Writer
From a stroller, 6-year-old Michael Sayih looks up and smiles at his mother. He reaches up with his right hand, straightening his arm, to squeeze his mother's hand. Patty Sayih smiles back. "This is very good," she says. "His legs are straight. He's holding my hand. He talks to me."
These are milestones for the Coral Springs boy, who doctors doubted would ever walk or talk. Michael was born two months premature with cerebral palsy, a neurological disorder caused by brain damage. The cerebral palsy left him unable to uncross his legs, use his hands, speak, or sleep through the night, for most of his six years.
Patty Sayih searched for an answer. Now she says she may have found an answer through experimental treatments that involve the use of low-frequency electromagnetic waves. The treatments are part of case studies being conducted at Pioneer Services International Ltd. in Boca Raton where Michael has been going since March.
"A friend told me about it. We came here for the first treatment and that night he slept through the night," Sayih says. "I decided that if nothing else, I'll take that." It was a turning point for her son.
When you have a hurt child, you're in a mission mode," says Sayih, who also has a son Adam, 7. "I cried until I couldn't cry any more and I prayed until I was prayed out. Then I just said, 'Guide meto something that can help.' "Since going to Pioneer, Michael has had 16 treatments, which consist of sitting in an easy chair inside a carpeted booth. The booth walls contain coils that produce a weak electromagnetic field that penetrates his body.The waves, according to inventor Jerry Jacobson, a retired Jupiter dentist, align cells in a person's body, helping them communicate with each other better. The device, called the Jacobson Resonator after its inventor, is undergoing testing in accordance with U.S. Food and Drug Administration procedures at the Pioneer Services clinic near the West Boca Medical Center.
Michael's mother says the treatments have helped. He can use his
hands. The right hand is no longer constantly balled in a fist. His legs
are looser and uncross. And he is talking.
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