In 1999, a tennis coach from Maroubra, Serge Benhayon, supposedly experienced a series of awakenings that imparted to him detailed understanding of how the body works, the real cause of disease and the methods needed for healing. This was the beginning of the “health care” group known as Universal Medicine.
The group preaches a religion known as “The way of the livingness”, which contends disease is caused by energetic disharmony from poor choices made in this and previous lives.
This destructive (or what the group has labelled “pranic”) energy can supposedly be released using a number of “esoteric” techniques including “connective tissue therapy”, breast massage, “Chakra puncture” using acupuncture, and ovarian massage in which the practitioner claims to “read” women’s ovaries.
Universal Medicine suggests physical disabilities result from sins in previous lives and the intrusion of evil spirits causes mental illness.
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The group is active in Australia and the UK, and reportedly receives large amounts of money from bequests, and has a steady income from treatments and the teaching of healing techniques to would-be esoteric practitioners.
Is Universal Medicine causing harm?
This group first came to my attention when a network I’m part of, Friends of Science in Medicine, was approached by one of its former patients. This patient saw a respiratory medicine specialist in Northern NSW for treatment of a severe, persistent cough. This doctor referred the patient to his wife, an “esoteric therapist” (the name given to Universal Medicine practitioners) who works in his clinic. His wife provided the patient with “esoteric lung massage therapy” (a back massage) at the cost of A$70.
When this didn’t help, the patient was told she might need chemotherapy or a lung transplant. This alarming diagnosis led to her spend more than A$30,000 on treatments by the Universal Medicine group.
With still no improvement, she withdrew treatment and sought advice from another respiratory physician who diagnosed interstitial pneumonitis (inflammation of the lungs) which disappeared with appropriate treatment.
The patient attempted to have the doctor disciplined by the NSW Medical Council. Eventually the professional standards committee did reprimand him and restrict his ability to refer patients to complementary therapy.
However, the doctor’s website still tells prospective patients his clinic offers both conventional and complementary medicine from him and his wife. The doctor has now stood down as council member of the Australian Medical Association’s Queensland branchfor passing medical information to the group.
The most distressing aspect of this story is the lack of any significant protection of consumers from these so-called health practices, not supported by any credible evidence and administered by practitioners with no medical qualifications. The Conversation sought response from Universal Medicine before publication of this story and Benhayon denied this woman was ever a patient of the group.
In 2014, a parliamentary inquiry into the protection of consumers looked at Universal Medicine in some detail. At issue was the ability of the NSW Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC) to adequately protect consumers.
The report stated while there was little anecdotal evidence to suggest actual harm caused by the treatments themselves, patients may forego seeking proper medical advice and care:
“Two patients who were undergoing therapies at Universal Medicine were independently diagnosed with cancer and bronchiectasis respectively, and required proper medical intervention in order to be properly treated”.