FAQ
When to Repeat a BATReset
Repeating BATReset is not calendar-first. The timing is tied to trend data from BAT Levels, BATScore, and follow-up testing results over time.
The Guiding Rule
Repeat BATReset when the data indicates renewed drift, not because a date on the calendar arrives. Provider teams use BATCheck and BAT Testing trend review to decide whether the pattern is holding steady or moving out of range again.
After Corrective Cycles
After a corrective cycle, repetition depends on whether post-cycle BAT Levels and BATScore trends remain stable. If trends stay steady, another full cycle may not be needed soon. If drift returns, a shorter or standard reset window may be considered.
After Preventive Cycles
Preventive use is framed as rhythm support for people with stable trends. If post-cycle data remains stable, cadence is usually kept conservative rather than increased.
How Timing Is Decided
BATReset repetition is individualized. Timing and cadence are determined from trend direction, recovery context, and provider review rather than fixed public schedules.
Provider Review Before Repeating
Before any repeat cycle, providers review post-cycle BATCheck data, BAT Testing trends, BATScore direction, recovery status, and current clinical context. A new cycle is tied to updated data review, not automatic recurrence.
Key Takeaway
Repeat BATReset based on trend direction, not routine scheduling. If stability holds, maintain it. If drift reappears, reset deliberately and re-check again.