Frequently Asked Questions
What symptoms does NIS treat?
Actually, NIS doesn’t treat symptoms. Instead, it is used to find the underlying cause of many symptom patterns. Symptoms often arise due to disrupted neurological signaling between the brain and body. The brain and nervous system regulate all functions in the body, even down to the cellular level. Therefore, many different symptoms can be related to disrupted signaling. NIS practitioners understand how to detect and correct these disrupted signaling patterns, thereby helping to restore optimal signaling. Common symptoms can include neck and back pain, headaches, anxiety, depression, ADHD, and other learning disorders, insomnia, autoimmune conditions, joint and muscle pain and much more.
Is NIS safe?
It is important to understand that NIS isn’t an intervention. In other words, your NIS practitioner isn’t doing something to your body. Instead, your practitioner relies on your brain to make all corrections in NIS. Your practitioner is only discovering neurological signaling is disrupted, and then prompts your brain to correct them. Unlike interventions like manipulation, drugs and even supplements NIS relies on the innate intelligence of the brain to restore normal signaling, making it 100% safe.
How long does it take to see results with NIS?
This depends on many factors such as your history of trauma, your lifestyle and overall health, and your stress level to name a few. Usually, most patients begin to feel relief after 4-6 visits, although complex cases can take longer.
Is NIS covered by my insurance?
NIS has no CPT or ICD codes associated with it. Therefore, billing insurance is not possible. Attempting to bill insurance by adding CPT or ICD codes would be considered insurance fraud and could result in severe fines and penalties. NIS is a cash only service.
How long is a typical NIS session?
Your initial NIS session is usually an hour long. After your initial visit, a NIS session takes from 20-30 minutes. NIS is an investigation to discover the root cause of signaling disruptions between the brain and body. This takes time and precision, so should never be rushed
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