Understanding Equine Bioscan with Kate Coleman

Equine BioScan is a biofeedback-based assessment tool used to identify patterns of stress and imbalance within the body. Rather than diagnosing disease, it offers directional insight — highlighting areas that may be under strain before they present as visible symptoms.

In this session, Kate Coleman walks through what BioScan is, how it works, and how she uses it in practice. Using hair samples, the system reads vibrational frequency patterns associated with cells, tissues, and organs to identify where stress or inflammation may be present.

Kate explains how to interpret scan results, what the color patterns represent, and how this information can be used alongside foundational care — including nutrition, environment, bodywork, and training — to support more informed decision-making.

Through real case examples, including Franklin and BB, this session illustrates how BioScan can help identify individual sensitivities, track changes over time, and bring clarity to situations where something feels “off” before it becomes obvious.

This is not a replacement for veterinary care, but a tool that can help guide questions, refine your approach, and support a more individualized understanding of your horse.

What You’ll Learn:

• What Equine BioScan is and how the technology works
• How scans are performed using hair samples
• How to read and understand scan results, including color patterns and stress indicators
• What types of imbalances or stressors may appear in a scan
• How BioScan findings can support decisions around nutrition, supplements, and environment
• How this tool can be used alongside veterinary care and foundational management

Kate Coleman explains Equine BioScan, a biofeedback-based tool used to highlight areas of stress and inflammation and support more informed, individualized care decisions.

Key Takeaways:
• BioScan is a non-diagnostic tool that identifies patterns of stress and inflammation before symptoms appear
• Results are directional, helping guide decisions rather than provide definitive answers
• Scan results reflect individual responses, even high-quality feeds or supplements may not suit every horse
• Early changes often appear in behavior and subtle body patterns before showing up physically
• BioScan can be used to track progress over time alongside bodywork, training, and management changes
• Individualized care is essential, there is no one-size-fits-all approach

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The Horse as a Complex Adaptive System with Ivana Ruddock-Lange