Follow-up & Unfolding
As the cure progresses, the case changes its picture. We follow wherever it leads.
The remedy may change.
As cure progresses, the disease changes its picture. The first remedy runs its course. At that point, a new remedy — matched to the new picture — may be required. Many times the same medicine may complete the cure. But as a rule, surveillance is needed and progress must be kept in check.
What follow-up looks like.
At each follow-up, you report what has changed — which symptoms have reduced, which have returned, how your energy and mood and sleep have shifted. The more accurately you observe and report, the more precisely we can respond.
The patient is not a passive recipient of treatment. They are an active participant in their own cure.
Frequency of follow-up.
Follow-ups are typically every 4 to 8 weeks in the early stages, depending on the case. As the cure stabilises, intervals may lengthen. We do not schedule unnecessary visits — but we do not leave a case unattended either.
One prescription alone will not cure a complex diseased state. The treatment must be followed through each layer until the organism is free.